CA1179315A - Process for producing alcohols - Google Patents
Process for producing alcoholsInfo
- Publication number
- CA1179315A CA1179315A CA000405494A CA405494A CA1179315A CA 1179315 A CA1179315 A CA 1179315A CA 000405494 A CA000405494 A CA 000405494A CA 405494 A CA405494 A CA 405494A CA 1179315 A CA1179315 A CA 1179315A
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- ruthenium
- reaction
- solvent
- carbon monoxide
- hydrogen
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired
Links
Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07C—ACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
- C07C29/00—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring
- C07C29/15—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively
- C07C29/151—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases
- C07C29/1512—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases characterised by reaction conditions
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07C—ACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
- C07C29/00—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring
- C07C29/15—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively
- C07C29/151—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases
- C07C29/1512—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases characterised by reaction conditions
- C07C29/1514—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases characterised by reaction conditions the solvents being characteristic
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07C—ACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
- C07C29/00—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring
- C07C29/15—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively
- C07C29/151—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases
- C07C29/153—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases characterised by the catalyst used
- C07C29/156—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases characterised by the catalyst used containing iron group metals, platinum group metals or compounds thereof
- C07C29/157—Preparation of compounds having hydroxy or O-metal groups bound to a carbon atom not belonging to a six-membered aromatic ring by reduction of oxides of carbon exclusively with hydrogen or hydrogen-containing gases characterised by the catalyst used containing iron group metals, platinum group metals or compounds thereof containing platinum group metals or compounds thereof
-
- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02P—CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES IN THE PRODUCTION OR PROCESSING OF GOODS
- Y02P20/00—Technologies relating to chemical industry
- Y02P20/50—Improvements relating to the production of bulk chemicals
- Y02P20/52—Improvements relating to the production of bulk chemicals using catalysts, e.g. selective catalysts
Landscapes
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Organic Chemistry (AREA)
- Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
- Organic Low-Molecular-Weight Compounds And Preparation Thereof (AREA)
- Low-Molecular Organic Synthesis Reactions Using Catalysts (AREA)
Abstract
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
This invention relates to the manufacture of valuable alcohols containing 1 to 2 carbon atoms, especially ethylene glycol, methanol, and ethanol, from reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide, by a homogeneous catalytic process using as the catalyst a synergistic mixture of solubilized ruthenium carbonyl complexes.
This invention relates to the manufacture of valuable alcohols containing 1 to 2 carbon atoms, especially ethylene glycol, methanol, and ethanol, from reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide, by a homogeneous catalytic process using as the catalyst a synergistic mixture of solubilized ruthenium carbonyl complexes.
Description
~ ~ 793:~ ~
13,142 PROCESS FOR PRODUCI~G ~LCOHOLS
This invention relates to an improved process, and the catalyst which achieves this process, for making ethylene glycol, methanol, and ethanol directly from synthesis gas, i.e., mixtures of hydrogen and carbon monoxide. More particularly, this invention achieves the production of ethylene glycol directly from synthesis gas using a particular synergistic combination of ruthenium carbonyl complex under process conditions.
This invention encompasses a process of producing ethylene glycol, methanol, and ethanol directly ~rom the reaction of synthesis gas in the presence of a stable ruthenium catalyst. The process of this invention is distinctive in the stability of the process, avoiding any significant 108s of ruthenium values from the reaction and in the catalyst employed.
DISCUSSIO~ OF THE PRIOR ~RT
-Owing to the limited availability of petroleum sources the cost of producing chemicals from petroleum has been steadily increasing. Many have raised the dire prediction of significant oil sllortages in the future.
Obviously, a diferent low co~t source is needed which can be converted into the valuable chemicals now derived rom petroleum ~ources. Synthesis gas is one such source which can be effectively utilized in certain circumstances to make chemical5.
The mo3t desirable aspect of synthesis ~as is that it can be produced from non-petroleum sources.
i .
g 3 ~ 5 13,14 Synthesis gas is derived by the combustion of any carbonaceous material, including coal, or any organic material, such as hydrocarbons, carbohydrates and the like. Synthesis gas has for a long time been considered a desirable starting material for the manufacture ~f a variety of chemicals. A number of chemicals have been made commercially from synthesis gas. Hydrocarbons have been made by the Fischer-Tropsch catalytic reaction.
Methanol is commercially manufactured by a heterogeneous catalytic reaction from synthesis gas. Aldehydes and alcohols are made from tne reaction of olefins and synthesis gas. If one could expand the production of chemicals in a commercial manner from synthesis gas then one would not be as presently dependent upon petroleum as the basic raw material even though it is an excellent raw material for making synthesi3 gas. Accordingly, intense interest in such processes has developed.
Pruett and WalXer, U.S. Patent No. 3,833,634, patented September 3, 1974, based on an application originally filed December 21, 1971, describe a process for preparing glycols by reacting an oxide oE carbon with hydrogen u~ing a rhodium carbonyl complex catalyst. ~rhe example~ of the patent compare the reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the presence o~ the desired rhodium containing catalyst and other metals. In Example 9 of the patent, the reaction was attempted with triruthenium dodecacarbonyl as the catalyst using tetrahydrofuran as the solvent with a reaction temperature of 230~C., for 2 hours, and "the J, ~9~
13,14~
product contained no polyhydric alcohol." As will be shown below, Pruett and Walker apparently failed to produce polyhydric alcohols because they did not run at the conditions of reaction long enough and/or with enough ruthenium containing catalyst to achieve reaction to produce at least a detectable amount of a polyhydric alcohol ~uch as ethylene glycol. Un~uestionably, ruthenium is not as active a catalyst source to produce glycol as is rhodium under the conditions investigated.
Gresham, U.S. Patent ~o. ~,535,060, describes a proce s for preparing monohydric alcohols by introducing carbon monoxide, hydrogen and a hydroxylated ~olvent into a reaction vessel and heating the mixture in the presence of a ruthenium-containing substance and an alkaline reagent which controls the pH within the range of 7 to 11.5, at a temperature within the range of 150 to 300C under a pressure within the range of 200 to 1,000 atmospheres.
Solid ruthenium dioxide is used in Example~ 1 and 2 of the aorementloned Gresham patent. At column
13,142 PROCESS FOR PRODUCI~G ~LCOHOLS
This invention relates to an improved process, and the catalyst which achieves this process, for making ethylene glycol, methanol, and ethanol directly from synthesis gas, i.e., mixtures of hydrogen and carbon monoxide. More particularly, this invention achieves the production of ethylene glycol directly from synthesis gas using a particular synergistic combination of ruthenium carbonyl complex under process conditions.
This invention encompasses a process of producing ethylene glycol, methanol, and ethanol directly ~rom the reaction of synthesis gas in the presence of a stable ruthenium catalyst. The process of this invention is distinctive in the stability of the process, avoiding any significant 108s of ruthenium values from the reaction and in the catalyst employed.
DISCUSSIO~ OF THE PRIOR ~RT
-Owing to the limited availability of petroleum sources the cost of producing chemicals from petroleum has been steadily increasing. Many have raised the dire prediction of significant oil sllortages in the future.
Obviously, a diferent low co~t source is needed which can be converted into the valuable chemicals now derived rom petroleum ~ources. Synthesis gas is one such source which can be effectively utilized in certain circumstances to make chemical5.
The mo3t desirable aspect of synthesis ~as is that it can be produced from non-petroleum sources.
i .
g 3 ~ 5 13,14 Synthesis gas is derived by the combustion of any carbonaceous material, including coal, or any organic material, such as hydrocarbons, carbohydrates and the like. Synthesis gas has for a long time been considered a desirable starting material for the manufacture ~f a variety of chemicals. A number of chemicals have been made commercially from synthesis gas. Hydrocarbons have been made by the Fischer-Tropsch catalytic reaction.
Methanol is commercially manufactured by a heterogeneous catalytic reaction from synthesis gas. Aldehydes and alcohols are made from tne reaction of olefins and synthesis gas. If one could expand the production of chemicals in a commercial manner from synthesis gas then one would not be as presently dependent upon petroleum as the basic raw material even though it is an excellent raw material for making synthesi3 gas. Accordingly, intense interest in such processes has developed.
Pruett and WalXer, U.S. Patent No. 3,833,634, patented September 3, 1974, based on an application originally filed December 21, 1971, describe a process for preparing glycols by reacting an oxide oE carbon with hydrogen u~ing a rhodium carbonyl complex catalyst. ~rhe example~ of the patent compare the reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the presence o~ the desired rhodium containing catalyst and other metals. In Example 9 of the patent, the reaction was attempted with triruthenium dodecacarbonyl as the catalyst using tetrahydrofuran as the solvent with a reaction temperature of 230~C., for 2 hours, and "the J, ~9~
13,14~
product contained no polyhydric alcohol." As will be shown below, Pruett and Walker apparently failed to produce polyhydric alcohols because they did not run at the conditions of reaction long enough and/or with enough ruthenium containing catalyst to achieve reaction to produce at least a detectable amount of a polyhydric alcohol ~uch as ethylene glycol. Un~uestionably, ruthenium is not as active a catalyst source to produce glycol as is rhodium under the conditions investigated.
Gresham, U.S. Patent ~o. ~,535,060, describes a proce s for preparing monohydric alcohols by introducing carbon monoxide, hydrogen and a hydroxylated ~olvent into a reaction vessel and heating the mixture in the presence of a ruthenium-containing substance and an alkaline reagent which controls the pH within the range of 7 to 11.5, at a temperature within the range of 150 to 300C under a pressure within the range of 200 to 1,000 atmospheres.
Solid ruthenium dioxide is used in Example~ 1 and 2 of the aorementloned Gresham patent. At column
2, lines 30-33 of the patent, the patentee states his belie that ruthenium dioxide is reduced in situ during the reaction. Example 1 compares the use of a number of solutes such as phosphoric acid, acidic phosphate buffer, no solutes at a}l, ammonia and sodium bicarbonate. In thi~ example the solvent wa~ water. In Example 2 o~ Gresham, a number of alcohols were characterized as solvent~.
Gresham states that ruthenium and its compounds ~ 17g3~5 13,142 are "specific" in their effect upon this reaction and other catalysts "do not lead to straight chain primary alcohols under the conditions of this process". There is no indication that Gresham's process, as opera~ed by him, produced ethylene glycol.
Gresham's work should be contrasted with his earlier work described in U.S. Patent No. 2,636,046, filed October 16, 1948. In this patent, Gresham describes the production of polyfunctional oxygen-containing organic products including such compounds as ethylene glycol, glycarine, and the like.*
This is accomplished by the reaction of hydrogen with carbon monoxide in the presence of a solvent to produce glycol. According to this patent, the reaction of carbon monoxide with hydrogen must be at pressures of above 1,000 atmospheres and "particularly above a minimum o~ about 1,400 atmospheres" in order to obtain the "polyfunctional oxygen-containing organic compounds.~. in excellent yield" (column 2, lines 9-17). The patent specifically states at column 2, lines 37-43, that:
~ n the hydrogenation of oxides o carbon at pressures o~ 1,000 atmosph~res and below, virtually no polyfunctional compounds are producea. At pressures above 1,000 atmospheres and especially at pressures of about 1,500 to 5,000 atmospheres, preferably 2,000 to 5,000 atmospheres, polyfunctional compounds are obtained."
* Note the evaluation of this work by Rathke and Feder, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 100, pp. 3623-3625 (May ~4, 1978).
_ 5 _ ~ ~79~
13,142 Though the examples of the patent describe only the use of cobalt catalyst, the patentee, at column 3, line 61 indicates that the catalyst may contain "cobalt, ruthenium, etc." According to the patantee, the most outstanding results are obtained by using a catalyst containing cobalt, eRpecially compounds of cobalt which are soluble in at least one of the ingredients of the reaction mixtures.
According to Roy L. Pruett, Annals, New York A demy of Sciences, Vol. 295, pages 239-248 (1977~, at page 245, metals other than rhodium were tested to determine the production of ethylene glycol from mixtures of carbon monoxide and hydrogen. These metals include cobalt, ruthenium, copp~r, manganese, iridium and platinum. O these metalR, only cobalt was found to 'have a slight activity, citing British Patent 665,698 which correspond~ generally to the last mentioned Gresnam U.S. Patent. Pruett stated that Auch slight activity with cobalt was "~ualitatively" in agreement with t'he results obtained by Ziesecke, 1952, Brennstof-C'hem, _ :385.
Prior to the filing o U.S. Patent No.
2,535,060 and subsequent to the iling o U.S. Patent No. 2,636,046, there was filed on April 12, 1949, a commonly assigned application by Howk, et al., which issued as U.S. Patent No. 2,549,470 on April 17, 1951.
The Howk, et al., patent is directed to a catalytic process for making monohydric ~traight chain alcohols and doe~ not men~ion the production of ethylene glycol.
~. `' .
~ ~.7g~3~ 5 13,142 The patent emphasizes the production of straight chain primary hydroxyalkanes having from 3 to 50 or more carbon atoms in tne molecule. This, the patent states, is accomplished by introducing hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and a hydroxylated solvent into a reaction vessel, and heating the mixture in the presence of a catalyst of the class consisting of ruthenium metal, ruthenium oxide and ruthenium carbonyl, at a pressure within the range of 200 to 1,000 atmospheres and at a temperature within the range of 100 to 250C. The liquid hydroxyl-containing reaction medium may be water or alcohol, pre~erably a primary hydroxyalkane having from 1-10 car'~on atoms per molecule. Aecording to the patentee, a substantial proportion of the reaction product usually consists of alcohols containing more than 6 carbon atoms per molecule~ The patent goes on to state (column 1, line 50, et seq.):
"The reaction products usually contain virtually no hydrocarbons, acids, esters~ or branched-chain alcohols. ~hese results were entirely unexpected, in view of the existing knowledge of the catalytic reaction between carbon monoxide and 'hydrogen in the presence of alchols and Group VIII metal catalysts."
According to the Howk, et al. patent:
"~t should be emphasized here ~hat, under the conditions of temperature~ pressure and gas ratios just described, no reaction takes place between carbon monoxide and hydrogen in a liquid medium (water or alcohol) iE one of the common group VIII metals, such as cobalt or nickel, is used as the catalyst. This is evidenced by the fact t'hat, using, for example, a cobalt catalyst, no siynificant drop in pressure is observed when carbon monoxide and hydrogen are contacted under the conditions recited. Ruthenium is thus unexpectedly ..~ ,~;, .
... .
~ ~93~ ~
13,142 different from these related metals." (Column 4, lines 19-30.) The numbered exampl~s indicate an apparent preference for making normal-monohydric alcohols, with the proportion of pentane soluble to pentane insoluble alcohol being at least 2:1. In one example, starting at the bottom of column 6 of Howk, et al., the solvent employed is characterized as a carboxylic acid or anhydride rather than the neutral hydroxylated solvents which were described in the other examples. This comparativ~ example demonstra~ed that in a process operated at 20~C. for 18 hours using pressures maintained in the range of 300-9S0 atmospheres by repressurizing periodically witll synthesis gas, there was produced a reaction product containing "a large quantity of wax." According to the author, 40.55 parts of esters boiling from 59C. at atmospheric pressure to 150C. at 116 millimeters pressure were obtained and this can be compared to the wax obtained in the amount of 37.06 parts. In that particular example, the patentee appears to have demonstrated that when the hydrQXyla ted golvent i5 not emp}oyed, the amount of wax e~sentially equals the amount of pentane soluble alcohol products obtained. This is supported by the statement at column 2 of Gresham U.S. 2,535,060 which refers to Howk, et al.
At column 3, lines 54, et ~eq., Howk, et al.
describe the influence that pressure has on the cour~e of the reaction. According to Howk, et al., with ,.`' ~ , ~ ~7g 3 ~ 5 13,142 pressures up to about 150 atmospheres the reaction products are only hydrocarbons. This appears to be in accord with recent work described by Masters, et al., in German Patent Application (Offenlegungsschrift) 2,644,185*, based upon British priority application Specification No. 40,322-75, filed October 2, 1975.
Masters, et al., obtained only hydrocarbons at such pressures using a ruthenium catalyst.
Fenton, U.S. Patent No. 3,579,566, patented May la, 1971, is concerned with a process of reducing organic acid anhydrides with hydrogen in the pr~sence of a Group VIII noble metal catalyst and a biphyllic ligand of phosphorus, arsenic or antimony. The process of Fenton bears a remarkable similarity to oxo processing conditions to produce aldehydes and alcohols (compare with Oliver, et al., U.S. Patent ~o. 3,539,634, patented November 10, 1970) except that Fenton fails to supply an olefinic compound to the reaction. In the reaction o~
Fenton, an acid anhydride, such as acetic acid anhydride, is reduced to ethylidene diacetate in the presance o hydrogen and a r~nodium halide or a mixture o~ palladium chloride and ruthenium trichloride cata-lyst, provided in combination with triphenylpho~phine.
Ethylene glycol diacetake is also observed. Carbon __. ___ _ * See Doyle, et al., J. of organometallic Chem., 174, C55-C58 (1979), who conclude that the process characterized in the German Offenlegungsschrift involved a heterogeneous Fischer-Tropsch reaction.
1 ~79~15 13,142 monoxide, which is added to some of the examples of Fenton, is described by Fenton, at column 2, lines 48-51, as follows: "If desired, a suitable inert gas, such as carbon monoxide can also be charged to the reaction zone...". (Emphasis added). Of particular significance is the fact that none of Fenton's examples produce a methyl ester~ Another point is that Fenton's ethylidene diacetate can be thermally cracked to produce vinyl acetate, see column 1, lines 42-44. It would seem possible that such occurred in Example 1 of Fenton and it is further possible that the acetic acid added to the vinyl acetate formed ethylene glycol diacetate.
In Canadian patent application 341,367, filed December 6, 1979, there is described a process for producing methyl and ethylene glycol esters by reacting carbon monoxide and hydrogen in a homogeneous liquid phase mix~ure comprising a ruthenium carbonyl complex and acyl compound such as acetic acid. The reaction is effected at a temperature between about 50C. to about 400C. and a pressure of between about 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm2) and about 12,500 psia (878.84 kg/cm2) for a period of time sufficient to produce such esters as the predominant product. There is described in Canadian patent application 385,662, filed September 11, 1981 an improved process for producing methyl and ethylene glycol esters in which the combined concentration of methyl ester, ethylene glycol ester and water in the reaction medium is maintained at less than about 30 vol.%.
~ r ,~.'~ .
~79~15 13,142 In Canadian patent application 341,367, there is an improved process for makin~ the products methanol, ethylene glycol, and ethanol or mixtures thereof, at relatively low pressures.
An interesting exception to the previously reported inactivity of ruthenium catalystc; to produce glycol is the high pressure (viz 1650-1750 bars) experiment reported by Fonseca, Jenner, Kiennemann, and Deluzarche, et al., High Pressure Science and Technology, 6th AIRAPT Conference ~Chapt~ "High Pressure Synthesis of Polyalcohols by Catalytic Hydrogenation of Carbon l~lonoxide"~, pages 733-738 (1979), published by Plenum Press, New York (see also a discussion of the same work in Erdol und Kohle, 32, 313 (1979)). The authors report the reaction in tetraglyme of a CO:M2 ~1:2 ratio) mixture at 1650-1765 bars, i.e., about 25,000 psi (1,757.6 kg/cm2) and 230C using triruthenium dodecacarbonyl and 2-pyridinol as a ligand, botb in unstated amounts, for a period of 5 hours. The authors report a percent conversion of 12.9 (unstated basis), and percent yield o~ polyols o~ 3 (unstated basis), and percent selectivities a~ ~ollows: ethylene glycol, 22.9: ylycerine, 0; methanol, 16.1. However, in a manuscript entitled "Reactions CO-H2 in Liquid Phase in Presence of Ruthenium Catalysts," by Jenner, Kiennemann, Bagherzadah, and Deluzarche, (React. Kim.
Catal. ~etters, 15, 103 (1980)) it is ~tated that with respect to the above experiment "We never could reproduce the run with Ru3~CO)12 when operating in a ~ :L7~15 13,142 vessel which has not been in contact with any rhodium catalyst. We suspect that in the former run, the formation of ethylene glycol was due to catalysis with metallic sediments of rhodium encrusted on the wall of the vessel (we showed tnat ethylene glycol is produced in appreciable yield with rhodium foam)".* In Williamson, et al., United States Patent 4,170,605 patented October 9, 1979 the patentees report in Examples I and II the reaction in l-propanol o synthe~is ga~ (CO:H2 = 1:1) at 25,000 psig and at 230C using ruthenium tristacetylacetonate) and 2-hydroxypyridine, the latter being the same ligand employed by Fonseca, et al., supra, for a period of 2 and 3 hours, respectively. In Example 1, Williamson, et al., report the production of 4 grams of product*~
containing (mole percent basis): ethylene glycol, 57;
and methanol 25. In Example II, 7 grams of product**
are reported containing 66 and 16 mole percent of ethylene glycol and methanol, respectively.
W. Keim, et al., (Journal of Catalysis, 61, 3S9 (1980)) has reported that reactions of Ru3(CO)12 under very high pressures (2,0Q0 bars) produce mainly methanol and methyl __. ______ * This report may be relevant to the reports by William~on et al., (in~ra) and Keim et al., (in~ra).
** Included in the 4 and 7 grams of product are trace amounts of water and methylformate as well as 16 mole percent (Example I) and 15 mole percent (Example II) of propylformate. The latter compound would appear to be derived from l-propanol initially present in the reaction mixture, rather than a synthesis gas-derived product.
.. ..
. ~
~ ~9~ ~ 5 13,142 formate, but traces of glycol (0.8 to 1.2 percent of the total products) were also seen. In one experiment a small amount of ethanol was detected. ~o glycerine was observed in these reactions.
In a recent report (J. Am. Chem. Soc., 101, 7419 (1979)), J.S. Bradley of Exxon Corporation reported the production of methanol and methyl formate at a selectivity greater than 99% without hydrocarbon products detected, by the reaction of synthesis gas (H2:CO=3:2) under pressures on the order of 1,300 atmospheres and at temperatures around 270~C using a Ru catalyst. Bradley observed that no ethanol, ethylene glycol, or acetates formed. Compare this result with that found by Pruett and Walker, ~upra, and the work o Fonseca, et al., and Williamson, et al., infra.
As pointed out above, ethylene glycol can be produced directly from a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide using a rhodium carbonyl complex as a catalyst. The literature describes (see U.S. Patent No.
Gresham states that ruthenium and its compounds ~ 17g3~5 13,142 are "specific" in their effect upon this reaction and other catalysts "do not lead to straight chain primary alcohols under the conditions of this process". There is no indication that Gresham's process, as opera~ed by him, produced ethylene glycol.
Gresham's work should be contrasted with his earlier work described in U.S. Patent No. 2,636,046, filed October 16, 1948. In this patent, Gresham describes the production of polyfunctional oxygen-containing organic products including such compounds as ethylene glycol, glycarine, and the like.*
This is accomplished by the reaction of hydrogen with carbon monoxide in the presence of a solvent to produce glycol. According to this patent, the reaction of carbon monoxide with hydrogen must be at pressures of above 1,000 atmospheres and "particularly above a minimum o~ about 1,400 atmospheres" in order to obtain the "polyfunctional oxygen-containing organic compounds.~. in excellent yield" (column 2, lines 9-17). The patent specifically states at column 2, lines 37-43, that:
~ n the hydrogenation of oxides o carbon at pressures o~ 1,000 atmosph~res and below, virtually no polyfunctional compounds are producea. At pressures above 1,000 atmospheres and especially at pressures of about 1,500 to 5,000 atmospheres, preferably 2,000 to 5,000 atmospheres, polyfunctional compounds are obtained."
* Note the evaluation of this work by Rathke and Feder, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 100, pp. 3623-3625 (May ~4, 1978).
_ 5 _ ~ ~79~
13,142 Though the examples of the patent describe only the use of cobalt catalyst, the patentee, at column 3, line 61 indicates that the catalyst may contain "cobalt, ruthenium, etc." According to the patantee, the most outstanding results are obtained by using a catalyst containing cobalt, eRpecially compounds of cobalt which are soluble in at least one of the ingredients of the reaction mixtures.
According to Roy L. Pruett, Annals, New York A demy of Sciences, Vol. 295, pages 239-248 (1977~, at page 245, metals other than rhodium were tested to determine the production of ethylene glycol from mixtures of carbon monoxide and hydrogen. These metals include cobalt, ruthenium, copp~r, manganese, iridium and platinum. O these metalR, only cobalt was found to 'have a slight activity, citing British Patent 665,698 which correspond~ generally to the last mentioned Gresnam U.S. Patent. Pruett stated that Auch slight activity with cobalt was "~ualitatively" in agreement with t'he results obtained by Ziesecke, 1952, Brennstof-C'hem, _ :385.
Prior to the filing o U.S. Patent No.
2,535,060 and subsequent to the iling o U.S. Patent No. 2,636,046, there was filed on April 12, 1949, a commonly assigned application by Howk, et al., which issued as U.S. Patent No. 2,549,470 on April 17, 1951.
The Howk, et al., patent is directed to a catalytic process for making monohydric ~traight chain alcohols and doe~ not men~ion the production of ethylene glycol.
~. `' .
~ ~.7g~3~ 5 13,142 The patent emphasizes the production of straight chain primary hydroxyalkanes having from 3 to 50 or more carbon atoms in tne molecule. This, the patent states, is accomplished by introducing hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and a hydroxylated solvent into a reaction vessel, and heating the mixture in the presence of a catalyst of the class consisting of ruthenium metal, ruthenium oxide and ruthenium carbonyl, at a pressure within the range of 200 to 1,000 atmospheres and at a temperature within the range of 100 to 250C. The liquid hydroxyl-containing reaction medium may be water or alcohol, pre~erably a primary hydroxyalkane having from 1-10 car'~on atoms per molecule. Aecording to the patentee, a substantial proportion of the reaction product usually consists of alcohols containing more than 6 carbon atoms per molecule~ The patent goes on to state (column 1, line 50, et seq.):
"The reaction products usually contain virtually no hydrocarbons, acids, esters~ or branched-chain alcohols. ~hese results were entirely unexpected, in view of the existing knowledge of the catalytic reaction between carbon monoxide and 'hydrogen in the presence of alchols and Group VIII metal catalysts."
According to the Howk, et al. patent:
"~t should be emphasized here ~hat, under the conditions of temperature~ pressure and gas ratios just described, no reaction takes place between carbon monoxide and hydrogen in a liquid medium (water or alcohol) iE one of the common group VIII metals, such as cobalt or nickel, is used as the catalyst. This is evidenced by the fact t'hat, using, for example, a cobalt catalyst, no siynificant drop in pressure is observed when carbon monoxide and hydrogen are contacted under the conditions recited. Ruthenium is thus unexpectedly ..~ ,~;, .
... .
~ ~93~ ~
13,142 different from these related metals." (Column 4, lines 19-30.) The numbered exampl~s indicate an apparent preference for making normal-monohydric alcohols, with the proportion of pentane soluble to pentane insoluble alcohol being at least 2:1. In one example, starting at the bottom of column 6 of Howk, et al., the solvent employed is characterized as a carboxylic acid or anhydride rather than the neutral hydroxylated solvents which were described in the other examples. This comparativ~ example demonstra~ed that in a process operated at 20~C. for 18 hours using pressures maintained in the range of 300-9S0 atmospheres by repressurizing periodically witll synthesis gas, there was produced a reaction product containing "a large quantity of wax." According to the author, 40.55 parts of esters boiling from 59C. at atmospheric pressure to 150C. at 116 millimeters pressure were obtained and this can be compared to the wax obtained in the amount of 37.06 parts. In that particular example, the patentee appears to have demonstrated that when the hydrQXyla ted golvent i5 not emp}oyed, the amount of wax e~sentially equals the amount of pentane soluble alcohol products obtained. This is supported by the statement at column 2 of Gresham U.S. 2,535,060 which refers to Howk, et al.
At column 3, lines 54, et ~eq., Howk, et al.
describe the influence that pressure has on the cour~e of the reaction. According to Howk, et al., with ,.`' ~ , ~ ~7g 3 ~ 5 13,142 pressures up to about 150 atmospheres the reaction products are only hydrocarbons. This appears to be in accord with recent work described by Masters, et al., in German Patent Application (Offenlegungsschrift) 2,644,185*, based upon British priority application Specification No. 40,322-75, filed October 2, 1975.
Masters, et al., obtained only hydrocarbons at such pressures using a ruthenium catalyst.
Fenton, U.S. Patent No. 3,579,566, patented May la, 1971, is concerned with a process of reducing organic acid anhydrides with hydrogen in the pr~sence of a Group VIII noble metal catalyst and a biphyllic ligand of phosphorus, arsenic or antimony. The process of Fenton bears a remarkable similarity to oxo processing conditions to produce aldehydes and alcohols (compare with Oliver, et al., U.S. Patent ~o. 3,539,634, patented November 10, 1970) except that Fenton fails to supply an olefinic compound to the reaction. In the reaction o~
Fenton, an acid anhydride, such as acetic acid anhydride, is reduced to ethylidene diacetate in the presance o hydrogen and a r~nodium halide or a mixture o~ palladium chloride and ruthenium trichloride cata-lyst, provided in combination with triphenylpho~phine.
Ethylene glycol diacetake is also observed. Carbon __. ___ _ * See Doyle, et al., J. of organometallic Chem., 174, C55-C58 (1979), who conclude that the process characterized in the German Offenlegungsschrift involved a heterogeneous Fischer-Tropsch reaction.
1 ~79~15 13,142 monoxide, which is added to some of the examples of Fenton, is described by Fenton, at column 2, lines 48-51, as follows: "If desired, a suitable inert gas, such as carbon monoxide can also be charged to the reaction zone...". (Emphasis added). Of particular significance is the fact that none of Fenton's examples produce a methyl ester~ Another point is that Fenton's ethylidene diacetate can be thermally cracked to produce vinyl acetate, see column 1, lines 42-44. It would seem possible that such occurred in Example 1 of Fenton and it is further possible that the acetic acid added to the vinyl acetate formed ethylene glycol diacetate.
In Canadian patent application 341,367, filed December 6, 1979, there is described a process for producing methyl and ethylene glycol esters by reacting carbon monoxide and hydrogen in a homogeneous liquid phase mix~ure comprising a ruthenium carbonyl complex and acyl compound such as acetic acid. The reaction is effected at a temperature between about 50C. to about 400C. and a pressure of between about 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm2) and about 12,500 psia (878.84 kg/cm2) for a period of time sufficient to produce such esters as the predominant product. There is described in Canadian patent application 385,662, filed September 11, 1981 an improved process for producing methyl and ethylene glycol esters in which the combined concentration of methyl ester, ethylene glycol ester and water in the reaction medium is maintained at less than about 30 vol.%.
~ r ,~.'~ .
~79~15 13,142 In Canadian patent application 341,367, there is an improved process for makin~ the products methanol, ethylene glycol, and ethanol or mixtures thereof, at relatively low pressures.
An interesting exception to the previously reported inactivity of ruthenium catalystc; to produce glycol is the high pressure (viz 1650-1750 bars) experiment reported by Fonseca, Jenner, Kiennemann, and Deluzarche, et al., High Pressure Science and Technology, 6th AIRAPT Conference ~Chapt~ "High Pressure Synthesis of Polyalcohols by Catalytic Hydrogenation of Carbon l~lonoxide"~, pages 733-738 (1979), published by Plenum Press, New York (see also a discussion of the same work in Erdol und Kohle, 32, 313 (1979)). The authors report the reaction in tetraglyme of a CO:M2 ~1:2 ratio) mixture at 1650-1765 bars, i.e., about 25,000 psi (1,757.6 kg/cm2) and 230C using triruthenium dodecacarbonyl and 2-pyridinol as a ligand, botb in unstated amounts, for a period of 5 hours. The authors report a percent conversion of 12.9 (unstated basis), and percent yield o~ polyols o~ 3 (unstated basis), and percent selectivities a~ ~ollows: ethylene glycol, 22.9: ylycerine, 0; methanol, 16.1. However, in a manuscript entitled "Reactions CO-H2 in Liquid Phase in Presence of Ruthenium Catalysts," by Jenner, Kiennemann, Bagherzadah, and Deluzarche, (React. Kim.
Catal. ~etters, 15, 103 (1980)) it is ~tated that with respect to the above experiment "We never could reproduce the run with Ru3~CO)12 when operating in a ~ :L7~15 13,142 vessel which has not been in contact with any rhodium catalyst. We suspect that in the former run, the formation of ethylene glycol was due to catalysis with metallic sediments of rhodium encrusted on the wall of the vessel (we showed tnat ethylene glycol is produced in appreciable yield with rhodium foam)".* In Williamson, et al., United States Patent 4,170,605 patented October 9, 1979 the patentees report in Examples I and II the reaction in l-propanol o synthe~is ga~ (CO:H2 = 1:1) at 25,000 psig and at 230C using ruthenium tristacetylacetonate) and 2-hydroxypyridine, the latter being the same ligand employed by Fonseca, et al., supra, for a period of 2 and 3 hours, respectively. In Example 1, Williamson, et al., report the production of 4 grams of product*~
containing (mole percent basis): ethylene glycol, 57;
and methanol 25. In Example II, 7 grams of product**
are reported containing 66 and 16 mole percent of ethylene glycol and methanol, respectively.
W. Keim, et al., (Journal of Catalysis, 61, 3S9 (1980)) has reported that reactions of Ru3(CO)12 under very high pressures (2,0Q0 bars) produce mainly methanol and methyl __. ______ * This report may be relevant to the reports by William~on et al., (in~ra) and Keim et al., (in~ra).
** Included in the 4 and 7 grams of product are trace amounts of water and methylformate as well as 16 mole percent (Example I) and 15 mole percent (Example II) of propylformate. The latter compound would appear to be derived from l-propanol initially present in the reaction mixture, rather than a synthesis gas-derived product.
.. ..
. ~
~ ~9~ ~ 5 13,142 formate, but traces of glycol (0.8 to 1.2 percent of the total products) were also seen. In one experiment a small amount of ethanol was detected. ~o glycerine was observed in these reactions.
In a recent report (J. Am. Chem. Soc., 101, 7419 (1979)), J.S. Bradley of Exxon Corporation reported the production of methanol and methyl formate at a selectivity greater than 99% without hydrocarbon products detected, by the reaction of synthesis gas (H2:CO=3:2) under pressures on the order of 1,300 atmospheres and at temperatures around 270~C using a Ru catalyst. Bradley observed that no ethanol, ethylene glycol, or acetates formed. Compare this result with that found by Pruett and Walker, ~upra, and the work o Fonseca, et al., and Williamson, et al., infra.
As pointed out above, ethylene glycol can be produced directly from a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide using a rhodium carbonyl complex as a catalyst. The literature describes (see U.S. Patent No.
3,957,857, issued May 18, 1976) that a desirable rhodium compound can be in the form of a rhodium carbonyl cluster compound, particularly one which exhibits a particular 3-band infrared spectral pattern. There has been a substantial amount of work done on the formation oE ethylene glycol from mixtures of hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the presence of rhodium carbonyl clu~ters, ~uch as is described in United States Paten~ Nos.
3,833,63~; 3,878,214; 3,878,2gO; 3,878,292; etc. to name but a few.
~7~1 5 13,142 The above discussion provides a characteri~ation of the technology heretofore published or filed upon which relates to the direct production of ethylene glycol from mixtures of carbon monoxide and hydrogen or the production of monohydric alcohols from the direct reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the presence of a ruthenium catalyst. For purposes of the discussion and descriptions contained herein, mixtures of hydrogen and carhon monoxide, regardless of the amount of each present, will be characterized, for the sake of convenience, as "synthesis gas". Thus, mole ratios of hydrogen to carbon monoxide of, e.g., 40 to 1 and .05 to 1 are arbitrarily classified as "synthesis gas". Where t~e molar ratio of one or the other is significant to the invention herein described, then specific reference to the desired ~olar ratio will be made.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
.
FIG. 1 depicts the infrared ~pectrum of PP~
CRU(CO)3I3], (PPN designates bisCtriphenyl-phosp~ine]iminium) prior to use in the process.
FIG. 2 depict~ the infrared ~pectrum of PPN CHRu3(CO)ll], hereinafter discussed, prior to use in the process.
FIG. 3 depicts the infrared spectrum of a 2:1 mo}ar mixture of PPN CHRU3(CO)11~ and PPN
CRU~CO~ 3I3~, respectively, prior to use in the proce~s accordin~3 to this invention.
~ ~79~15 13,142 FIG. 4 depicts the infrared spectrum of a catalytic mixture according to this invention obtained from the Ru3(CO)12 and sodium iodide after employed in the proce~s (as employed in Example 1, hereinafter discussed).
FIG. 5 depicts the infrared spectrum of a reaction mixture after ~he process i5 carried out wherein a mixture PPN ~HRu3(CO)llJ and PPN~RU3(CO)3I3J was employed in a 2:1 molar ratio ~as employed in Example 4, hereinafter discussed).
FIG. 6 depicts the infrared spectrum of the reactiOn mi~ture of Example 26, at a pressure of 8000 psig.
FIG. 7 and FIG. 8 depict the relationship between the ratio of moles of Ru~CO)3I3 to moles of HRu3(CO)ll and the rate of formation of ethylene glycol. (Table II) SUMMARY OF THE _ EN~ION
The procesq of this invention relates to the production of ethylene glycol in a homogeneous liquid pha3e reaction by employing a synergistic mixture of a ruthenium carbonyl ioclide-containing complex and a ruth~nium carbonyl hydrido comple~. The ruthenium catalyst employed in the process is indicated by the pre~ence of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i.e., Ru(C0)3I3 and HRu3(CO)ll, which constitute a synergistic combination indicating the ruthenium catalyst which is characterized by an infrared spectrum ~79~ 3,l42 characterized by three significant infrared bands betweetl about plus or minus 10cm of about 2100cm 1, 2015cm 1, and 1990cm 1.
DETAILED DESCRIPTIOM OF THE I~VE~TION
The process of this invention involves the conversion of synthesis gas, however derived, into a limited variety of valuable alcohol compounds which themselves can be directly consumed or which can be employed as star~ing materials to make other valuable chemicals. The process of this invention is concerned with making 2 carbon atom alcohols, to wit, ethanol ancl ethylene glycol and, in particular~ ethylene glycol. In addition, the process of this invention also pro~uces methanol. The process of this invention is capable of producing predominantly ethylene glycol or predominantly methanol, or predominantly ethanol, or mixtures of them each in large concentrations. The process o this invention provides the capability of a low cost route to methanol, ethanol and ethylene glycol, especially ethylene glycol.
One o~ the deficiencies of certain of the a~orementioned processes for making ethylene glycol from aynthesis gag wa~ the utilization of a rhodium carbonyl complex as the catalyat, which processe~ are dependent on the high price of rhodium. The high cost of rhodium is created by it~ limited availability and the tremendous demand for it. (For example, rhodium presently i5 employed in catalytic converters which : ~
1 ~931 5 13,142 comprise the automotive combustion devices for reducing automotive pollutant emissions.) Thus, a commercial process w-hich uses rhodium as a catalyst is affected by the high capital expense to purchase the metal and the stringent controls needed to limit catalyst losses in order to keep the economics of the process competitive.* Ruthenium, on the other hand, is a precious metal which presently has no significant commercial application. Its present cost is approximately l/20th, and le~s, that of rhodium even though its concentration in the ore from which both are obtained is about the same. Ruthenium has been explored as a catalyst by many, as is ~hown by the discussed references, supra. It ha~ been considered as a hydrogenation catalyst, as a hydroformylation catalyst, as a catalyst to produce a wide range of monohydric alcohols (non-specific as to any of them) exclusive of methanol, as an alcohol homologation catalyst such as for the conversion of methanol to ethanol,~* as a high pressure catalyst to selectively produce methanol and methyl ormate, and its inactivity as a catalyst to produce glycol has been noted above.
DE~AILED DESCRIPTIO~ OF THE I~VENTION
~his process constitutes a relatively low * See Cornils, et al., Hvdrocarbon Proce~sing, ~une, 1975, pp. 83 to 91.
** See, for example, U.S. Patents 4,133,966 and 3,285,g48; and Japanese Patent Application (KoXai) No. 52-73804/77 (June 21, 1977) ~Application No.
50-149391/75 (application date, December 15, 1975)~
to Mitsubishi Gas Chemical Indu3try Company.
~, ....
~ ~ 79~ i 5 13,142 pressure process for selectively converting synthesis gas to such valuable chemicals as ethylene glycol, ethanol and methanol. Also produced by the process of this invention are glycerol (i.e. glycerine), 1,2-propylene glycol, l-propanol and methyl formate.
However, the process of this invention is mainly concerned with the production of ethylene glycol (the most valued product) and to a lesser extent ethanol and methanol, since they are produced in significantly greater a~ounts than the other products. The process of this invention is accomplished by the presence of a synergistic ~ombination of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes.
The process of this inventiGn is carried out with a synexgistic mixture of ruthenium carbonyl complexes present in a solvent, even though such complexes may exist during the reaction in more than one li~uid phase. In this sense, the reaction is termed a homogeneous liquid phase reaction. There may be more than one such phase existing in the reaction zone but ~he ruthenium catalyst, as indicated by the presence of the two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i~ always dis~olved in at lea~t one of 3uch phAses and i~ always in a dissolved liquid state. The problem with employing heterogeneous ruthenium catalysis in the reaction zone is that such will induce the Fischer-Tropsch reaction resultiny in the formation of hydrocarbons and/or a variety of oxygenated hydrocarbons having a variety of molecular weights with low selectivity to any one compound. In fact, the presence of such products ' ' ' .
~ ~79~ ~ 5 13,142 suggests that undissolved ruthenium is present and that a non-homogeneous liquid phase reaction occurred.
The process of this invention involves the solubilization of ruthenium and the presence of the synergistic combination of ruthenium carbonyl complexes in the presence of synthesis gas at temperatures, pressures and for a period of time sufficient to produce ethylene glycol. Such conditions are set forth herein.
In ~implistic and in the broadest terms, the invention comprises the solubilization under the reaction conditions (i.e., time, temperature and pressure~ of a ruthenium source, preferably ruthenium in the absence of any of other platinum group metals (viz., platinum, palladium, rhodium and iridium),* in an app~opriate solvent under a prescribed synthesis gas pressure to provide a ruthenium carbonyl catalyst characterized by the synergistic mixture of rutnenium carbonyl complexes Ru(CO)3I3 and HRu(CO)l1 which mixture i9 characterized by an infrared spectrum having three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus lOcm 1 of about 2100cm , 2015cm and l990cm 1 Further, other in~rared bands are usuall~
ob~erved at 2070cm 1, 1955cm 1 and 1720cm 1 (see Figures 1-4~. It will be appreciated that the exact position of said infrared bands may be dependent on the solvent employed, counter-ions present, the presence o~
ligands and the like, but in most cases will be within * See U. S. Patent 3,g89,799, patented ~ovember 2, 1976, wherein ruthenium is a cation in a mixed metal rhodium-containing carbonyl complex.
~ ~7~
13,142 +lOcm 1 of the above stated value. The reaction conditions comprise (i) a period of ~ime at a temperature and pressure which cause the hydrogen and carbon monoxide to reac~ to produce the desired product~
(ii) a temperature between about 50C. and 400C. and (iii) a pressure between 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm ) and 15,000 psia (1,054.6 kg/cm~). The catalyst o this invention is indicated ~y the presencP of three significant infrared bands, and the aforementioned ruthenium containing carbonyl complexes which under the prescribed reaction conditions catalyze the aforementioned reaction between carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
The process of this invention is distinctive in the selection of materials which comprise the homogeneous liquid phase mixture, the reaction parameters and the stability of the ruthenium-containing catalyst in most cases, indeed in all cases, studied.
As with any technology, this proce3s has undergone evolutionary changes and its further examination will undoubtedly bring more changes, most likely in the form of additional or ~ubstitutional step~ and/or materials~
It i8 known that this process may be carried out in the pre~ence of a promoter although ~election of the promoter i~ not clearly understood. A promoter, in the context of thi~ invention, is a ~aterial provided to the reaction which provides a promotional effect in that it enhances the production ~viz., rate, yield, or efficiency) of any of the productsJ or it improves the selectivity of the reaction toward ethylene glycol ~ ~ 7 ~ 3, l42 rather than methanol or ethanol, or it improves the selectivity of the reaction to ethanol rather than methanol irrespective of the amount of ethylene glycol produced, or it helps to reduce the lo~s of ruthenium during the reaction~ Typical of the promoters that are believed capable of being employed in the instant process are Lewis base promoters to the e~ctent that such promoter enhances the instant process.
The solvent is selected such that it is capable of maintaining the ruthenium carbonyl complex catalyst in the homogeneous li~uid phase mixturs throughout the reaction, The solvent may po~sibly provide an additional benefit such as influencing the kinds of ion pairing that exist during the course of the reactionD
The catalyst of this invention i8 a ruthenium carbonyl catalyst which contains carbon monoxide directly bonded to ruthenium (ruthenium carbonyl). The ruthenium compound which is provided to the reaction i~
not necessarily in a form which will effectively catalyze the reaction even if it contains a carbon monoxide ligand bonded to it~ ~uthenium compounds such a~ ruthenium ~alts, oxides and carbonyl clu~ters may be introduced to the reaction in a condition which allows them to be ~olubilized, and under the conditions of the reaction they are converted into carbonyl complexe~
which efectively catalyze the reaction. The composition and ~tructure o~ the ruthenium carbonyl complexes which catalyze the desired reaction are not specifically known but their presence is indicated by a ~79~5 13,142 mixture of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i.e., )3I3 and HRu3(C0)11 - having characteristic infrared spectrum characterized by three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus lOcm 1 of about 2100cm 1, 2015cm, and l900cm 1 Varied reaction conditions, solvents, ligands, counter-ions, promoters (if employed), may result in different amounts of the desired products of the process, and different rates, efficiencies and/or yields, but it is believed that, although each provides a different and distinct catalytic environment that the ~ynergistic mixture of ruthenium carbonyls aforementioned and the characteristic infrared spectrum will be present.
The aforementioned ruthenium carbonyl catalyst of this invention is also characterized by having an average oxidation state of between about -0.2 and about 0.25. The average oxidation state of the synergistic combination of the ruthenium carbonyl complexes is calculated by taking the oxidation state of a ruthenium atom in HRu3~Co)ll- as -1/3 and the oxidation state of a ruthenium atom in Ru~C0)3I3- a~ ~2.
Accordinyly, the avera~e oxidation ~tate of a 2:1 molar f HRu3(C0)11- to Ru(C0)3I3- is zero and ~uch average oxidation ~tate is most preferred.
Similarly, as above discussed, ruthenium-containing compourld~ which provide the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst of this invention may be employed.
~ ~, ~ ~7~ 13,142 The ruthenium-containing substances which may be employed in the practice of this invention to form the catalyst, as characterized by the synergistic ruthenium carbonyl mixture, under proces~ conditions encompass those which are described, for example, in Gresham, U.S. Patent No. 2,535,060 at column 2, starting at line 38 to line 48, and ruthenium carbonyl compounds. It generally is not advisable to place ruthenium compounds or substances on a support material for use in t'ne process of this invention because such offers no benefits over solubiliziny such ruthenium compounds in combination with the aforementioned solvent and/or promoter. Moreover, ruthenium deposited on a ~upport material can be expected to be solubilized in the homogeneous liquid phase reaction system of this invention as it is contacted with carbon monoxide.
Ruthenium oxides, such as dioxide, sesquioxide, or tetraoxide, may be converted to the ruthenium carbonyl complex employed in the proces~ o thi~ invention.
Ruthenium carbonyl compounds (which include ruthenium carbonyl Aydrides or ruthenium carbonyl clusters) are already provided with a carbonyl ligand, and under the conditions of the reaction can be sufficiently changed to achieve the de~ired catalytic affect. Ruthenium salts such as those of organic acids can be employed in the practice o~ this invention to produce the cataly~t.
In addition to those ruthenium compounds described in the aforementioned Gresham patent, one may employ ruthenium commpounds of bidentate ligands, allyl , , . .~
~ ~7931 ~
13,142 complexes, arene complexes, halides, and alkyl complexes. The choice of ruthenium compounds i5 varied and not critical to this invention so long as the aforementioned characteristic infrared spectrum is observed. A number of ruthenium complexes are known to be more stable to the presence of carbon monoxide than other ruthenium compounds and the skilled worker can determine which particular ruthenium compound might take longer to initiate a reaction than other rutheniu~
compounds. On that basis, one can select for the ~urposes of convenience the particular ruthenium compound to be utilized in forming the catalyst.
However, ruthenium which is associated with an organic molecule or complexed with carbon monoxide is most readily solubilized ~o as to provide a readily available source of the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst of this process.
Although the exact nature of the actual ruthenium catalyst is not precisely known the presence of an active catalytic system is indicated by the presence either before, during or after the process is carried out o a synergistic mixture of Ru(CO)3I3 and E~R3~CO)ll~ This mixture can be initially provided to the proce~s or formed in situ, such as by the reaction of Ru3(CO)l2 with excess I as follows:
7/3 Ru~C0)l2 + 3I +H2 2~Ru3(CO~ll +Ru~C0)3I3 ~ 3co , ~ ~7g~
13,142 Selection of the ruthenium-containing starting material is important if in situ formation is desired since it has been observed that use of Ru~II) or Ru(III) halide complexes which do not form the synergistic mixture of Ru(C0)3I3 and HRu3(C0)11 do not provide the ruthenium catalyst employed in the process of this invention. However, such Ru(II) or Ru(III) complexes may be converted to the ruthenium catalyst according to this invention by reaction with an appropriate base and an iodide containing compound. For example, if the ruthenium compound is RuI3 the following depicts the conversion of such compound:
(1) 7/3 RuI3 ~ 210H + 25C0 + 23/2 H~
Ru(co)3I3 + 2HRu3(C0)11+ 18I ~ 21H20 The complex Ru(C0)3I3- may be converted to an active Ru catalyst as follows-(2) 7Ru(C03)3I3- ~ 140H ~8H2+4C0 ( )3I3 ~ 2HRu3(C0)11 + 18I + 14H20 Similarly, the Ru catalyst according to the invention may be prepared by employing HRu3(C0)11 as follows:
(3) 7/3HRu3~C0)11-~ 7/6I2-t 2/3 I
RU(C0)3I3-+2HRU3(C0)11~ 2/3 C0~ H2 In addition, the presence of the ruthenium complex catalyst of this invention is indicated by a reaction medium having an infrared spectrum characterized by ~ :~ 793:~ 5 13,142 three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus lOcm 1 of about 2100cm 1, 2015cm 1 and l990cm 1.
As characterized by equations (1), (2) and (3) the ormation of the catalyst according to this invention is inhibited by the addition of base (reducing agent) and acid (oxidizing agent) beyond that required to give the ruthenium catalyst.
As characterized above, this process is operated as a homogeneous liquid phase mixture. The process is typically carried out in a solvent for the catalyst. The solvent is a liquid in which the cataly~;t components are soluble under the prescribed conditions of the reaction. The solvent may be solid at room temperature but should at least, in part, be a liquid under the conditions o reaction.
A preferred solvent iq a liquid at reaction conditions which is polar or complexes ions. Of the polar solvents those which have a relatively high dielectric constant are more preferred. As for the ~olvents which complex ions, the desirable solvents are those which under the reaction conditions have th~
capacity o~ aomplexing ions such as available cations.
As stated previously, the solvent may provide a promoter aomponent~ Solvents having a dielectric constant at 25C. or at its melting temperature, whichever is hlgher, o~ greater than 2 are preferred.
Illustrative o suitable polar solvents are, e.g., water, ketones, esters including lactones, amides ~ 1793~ 5 13,142 including lactams, sulfones, sulfoxides, halogenated hydrocarbons, aromatic hydrocarbons, and the like.
Illustrative of specific solvents encompassed by the above classes of polar solvents are, for example, aromatic hydroc~rbons, e.g., benzene, toluene, xyle~e, naphthalene, alkylnaphthalene, etc.; carboxylic acids such as acetic acid, propionic acid, butyric acid, caproic acid, stearic acid, benzoic acid, cyclohexane-carboxylic acid, etc~; ketones such as acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, cyclohexanone, cyclopentanone, etc.;
esters such as me~hyl acetate, ethyl acetate, propyl acetate, butyl acetate, methyl propionate, ethyl butyrate, methyl laurate, etc.; anhydrides such as phthalic anhydride, acetic anhydride, etc.; lactams such as N-alkyl caprolactams, SUch as N-methylcaprolactam;
N-alkyl pyrrolidinones such as N-methyl pyrrolidinone;
cyclic ureas such as N,N'-dimethylimidazolidone; polyols such as ethylene glycol, glycerine, erythritol, polyalkylene glycol containing two to about ten thousand repeating units; lactones such as gamma-butyrolactone;
halogenated hydrocarbons sush as chlorobenzene, chloro~orm, methylene chloride, 2,2-dichloropropane;
amides such as dimethylformamide, dimethylacetamide, hexamethyl- phophoramide; sulfones such as sul~olane, dimethylsulfone; substituted ~ul~olanes; 3ulfoxide~ such as dimethylsulfoxide, diphenyl sulfoxide; a~ well as many others.
Illustrative of suitable complexing solvents are the ethers, cryptand~, and the like. Illustrative ~ ~793~5 l3,l42 of speciic solvents encompassed by the above classes of complexing solvents are, for example, ethers such as tetrahydrofuran, tstrahydropyran, diethyl ether, 1,2-dimethoxybenzene, 1,2-diethoxybenzene, the mono and dialkyl ethers oE alkylene and polyalkylene glycols, such as ethylene glycol, of 1,2-propylene glycol, oE
1,2-butylene ylycol, of diethylene glycol, of di-1,2-propylene glycol, oE triethylene glycol, of pentaethylene glycol (such as triglyme, tetraglyme and pentaglyme), of di-1,2-butylene glycol, of oxyethylene-oxypropylene glycols, etc., preferably those in which the alkylene group contains 2 and/or 3 carbon atoms in the divalent moiety, such as ethylene and 1,2-propylene; the cryptands such as described in U.S.
Patent ~o. 4,111,975; the crown ethers ~or Crown Ethers, as one may prefer) such as described in U.S. Patent No.
3,833,63~; 3,878,214; 3,878,2gO; 3,878,292; etc. to name but a few.
~7~1 5 13,142 The above discussion provides a characteri~ation of the technology heretofore published or filed upon which relates to the direct production of ethylene glycol from mixtures of carbon monoxide and hydrogen or the production of monohydric alcohols from the direct reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the presence of a ruthenium catalyst. For purposes of the discussion and descriptions contained herein, mixtures of hydrogen and carhon monoxide, regardless of the amount of each present, will be characterized, for the sake of convenience, as "synthesis gas". Thus, mole ratios of hydrogen to carbon monoxide of, e.g., 40 to 1 and .05 to 1 are arbitrarily classified as "synthesis gas". Where t~e molar ratio of one or the other is significant to the invention herein described, then specific reference to the desired ~olar ratio will be made.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
.
FIG. 1 depicts the infrared ~pectrum of PP~
CRU(CO)3I3], (PPN designates bisCtriphenyl-phosp~ine]iminium) prior to use in the process.
FIG. 2 depict~ the infrared ~pectrum of PPN CHRu3(CO)ll], hereinafter discussed, prior to use in the process.
FIG. 3 depicts the infrared spectrum of a 2:1 mo}ar mixture of PPN CHRU3(CO)11~ and PPN
CRU~CO~ 3I3~, respectively, prior to use in the proce~s accordin~3 to this invention.
~ ~79~15 13,142 FIG. 4 depicts the infrared spectrum of a catalytic mixture according to this invention obtained from the Ru3(CO)12 and sodium iodide after employed in the proce~s (as employed in Example 1, hereinafter discussed).
FIG. 5 depicts the infrared spectrum of a reaction mixture after ~he process i5 carried out wherein a mixture PPN ~HRu3(CO)llJ and PPN~RU3(CO)3I3J was employed in a 2:1 molar ratio ~as employed in Example 4, hereinafter discussed).
FIG. 6 depicts the infrared spectrum of the reactiOn mi~ture of Example 26, at a pressure of 8000 psig.
FIG. 7 and FIG. 8 depict the relationship between the ratio of moles of Ru~CO)3I3 to moles of HRu3(CO)ll and the rate of formation of ethylene glycol. (Table II) SUMMARY OF THE _ EN~ION
The procesq of this invention relates to the production of ethylene glycol in a homogeneous liquid pha3e reaction by employing a synergistic mixture of a ruthenium carbonyl ioclide-containing complex and a ruth~nium carbonyl hydrido comple~. The ruthenium catalyst employed in the process is indicated by the pre~ence of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i.e., Ru(C0)3I3 and HRu3(CO)ll, which constitute a synergistic combination indicating the ruthenium catalyst which is characterized by an infrared spectrum ~79~ 3,l42 characterized by three significant infrared bands betweetl about plus or minus 10cm of about 2100cm 1, 2015cm 1, and 1990cm 1.
DETAILED DESCRIPTIOM OF THE I~VE~TION
The process of this invention involves the conversion of synthesis gas, however derived, into a limited variety of valuable alcohol compounds which themselves can be directly consumed or which can be employed as star~ing materials to make other valuable chemicals. The process of this invention is concerned with making 2 carbon atom alcohols, to wit, ethanol ancl ethylene glycol and, in particular~ ethylene glycol. In addition, the process of this invention also pro~uces methanol. The process of this invention is capable of producing predominantly ethylene glycol or predominantly methanol, or predominantly ethanol, or mixtures of them each in large concentrations. The process o this invention provides the capability of a low cost route to methanol, ethanol and ethylene glycol, especially ethylene glycol.
One o~ the deficiencies of certain of the a~orementioned processes for making ethylene glycol from aynthesis gag wa~ the utilization of a rhodium carbonyl complex as the catalyat, which processe~ are dependent on the high price of rhodium. The high cost of rhodium is created by it~ limited availability and the tremendous demand for it. (For example, rhodium presently i5 employed in catalytic converters which : ~
1 ~931 5 13,142 comprise the automotive combustion devices for reducing automotive pollutant emissions.) Thus, a commercial process w-hich uses rhodium as a catalyst is affected by the high capital expense to purchase the metal and the stringent controls needed to limit catalyst losses in order to keep the economics of the process competitive.* Ruthenium, on the other hand, is a precious metal which presently has no significant commercial application. Its present cost is approximately l/20th, and le~s, that of rhodium even though its concentration in the ore from which both are obtained is about the same. Ruthenium has been explored as a catalyst by many, as is ~hown by the discussed references, supra. It ha~ been considered as a hydrogenation catalyst, as a hydroformylation catalyst, as a catalyst to produce a wide range of monohydric alcohols (non-specific as to any of them) exclusive of methanol, as an alcohol homologation catalyst such as for the conversion of methanol to ethanol,~* as a high pressure catalyst to selectively produce methanol and methyl ormate, and its inactivity as a catalyst to produce glycol has been noted above.
DE~AILED DESCRIPTIO~ OF THE I~VENTION
~his process constitutes a relatively low * See Cornils, et al., Hvdrocarbon Proce~sing, ~une, 1975, pp. 83 to 91.
** See, for example, U.S. Patents 4,133,966 and 3,285,g48; and Japanese Patent Application (KoXai) No. 52-73804/77 (June 21, 1977) ~Application No.
50-149391/75 (application date, December 15, 1975)~
to Mitsubishi Gas Chemical Indu3try Company.
~, ....
~ ~ 79~ i 5 13,142 pressure process for selectively converting synthesis gas to such valuable chemicals as ethylene glycol, ethanol and methanol. Also produced by the process of this invention are glycerol (i.e. glycerine), 1,2-propylene glycol, l-propanol and methyl formate.
However, the process of this invention is mainly concerned with the production of ethylene glycol (the most valued product) and to a lesser extent ethanol and methanol, since they are produced in significantly greater a~ounts than the other products. The process of this invention is accomplished by the presence of a synergistic ~ombination of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes.
The process of this inventiGn is carried out with a synexgistic mixture of ruthenium carbonyl complexes present in a solvent, even though such complexes may exist during the reaction in more than one li~uid phase. In this sense, the reaction is termed a homogeneous liquid phase reaction. There may be more than one such phase existing in the reaction zone but ~he ruthenium catalyst, as indicated by the presence of the two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i~ always dis~olved in at lea~t one of 3uch phAses and i~ always in a dissolved liquid state. The problem with employing heterogeneous ruthenium catalysis in the reaction zone is that such will induce the Fischer-Tropsch reaction resultiny in the formation of hydrocarbons and/or a variety of oxygenated hydrocarbons having a variety of molecular weights with low selectivity to any one compound. In fact, the presence of such products ' ' ' .
~ ~79~ ~ 5 13,142 suggests that undissolved ruthenium is present and that a non-homogeneous liquid phase reaction occurred.
The process of this invention involves the solubilization of ruthenium and the presence of the synergistic combination of ruthenium carbonyl complexes in the presence of synthesis gas at temperatures, pressures and for a period of time sufficient to produce ethylene glycol. Such conditions are set forth herein.
In ~implistic and in the broadest terms, the invention comprises the solubilization under the reaction conditions (i.e., time, temperature and pressure~ of a ruthenium source, preferably ruthenium in the absence of any of other platinum group metals (viz., platinum, palladium, rhodium and iridium),* in an app~opriate solvent under a prescribed synthesis gas pressure to provide a ruthenium carbonyl catalyst characterized by the synergistic mixture of rutnenium carbonyl complexes Ru(CO)3I3 and HRu(CO)l1 which mixture i9 characterized by an infrared spectrum having three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus lOcm 1 of about 2100cm , 2015cm and l990cm 1 Further, other in~rared bands are usuall~
ob~erved at 2070cm 1, 1955cm 1 and 1720cm 1 (see Figures 1-4~. It will be appreciated that the exact position of said infrared bands may be dependent on the solvent employed, counter-ions present, the presence o~
ligands and the like, but in most cases will be within * See U. S. Patent 3,g89,799, patented ~ovember 2, 1976, wherein ruthenium is a cation in a mixed metal rhodium-containing carbonyl complex.
~ ~7~
13,142 +lOcm 1 of the above stated value. The reaction conditions comprise (i) a period of ~ime at a temperature and pressure which cause the hydrogen and carbon monoxide to reac~ to produce the desired product~
(ii) a temperature between about 50C. and 400C. and (iii) a pressure between 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm ) and 15,000 psia (1,054.6 kg/cm~). The catalyst o this invention is indicated ~y the presencP of three significant infrared bands, and the aforementioned ruthenium containing carbonyl complexes which under the prescribed reaction conditions catalyze the aforementioned reaction between carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
The process of this invention is distinctive in the selection of materials which comprise the homogeneous liquid phase mixture, the reaction parameters and the stability of the ruthenium-containing catalyst in most cases, indeed in all cases, studied.
As with any technology, this proce3s has undergone evolutionary changes and its further examination will undoubtedly bring more changes, most likely in the form of additional or ~ubstitutional step~ and/or materials~
It i8 known that this process may be carried out in the pre~ence of a promoter although ~election of the promoter i~ not clearly understood. A promoter, in the context of thi~ invention, is a ~aterial provided to the reaction which provides a promotional effect in that it enhances the production ~viz., rate, yield, or efficiency) of any of the productsJ or it improves the selectivity of the reaction toward ethylene glycol ~ ~ 7 ~ 3, l42 rather than methanol or ethanol, or it improves the selectivity of the reaction to ethanol rather than methanol irrespective of the amount of ethylene glycol produced, or it helps to reduce the lo~s of ruthenium during the reaction~ Typical of the promoters that are believed capable of being employed in the instant process are Lewis base promoters to the e~ctent that such promoter enhances the instant process.
The solvent is selected such that it is capable of maintaining the ruthenium carbonyl complex catalyst in the homogeneous li~uid phase mixturs throughout the reaction, The solvent may po~sibly provide an additional benefit such as influencing the kinds of ion pairing that exist during the course of the reactionD
The catalyst of this invention i8 a ruthenium carbonyl catalyst which contains carbon monoxide directly bonded to ruthenium (ruthenium carbonyl). The ruthenium compound which is provided to the reaction i~
not necessarily in a form which will effectively catalyze the reaction even if it contains a carbon monoxide ligand bonded to it~ ~uthenium compounds such a~ ruthenium ~alts, oxides and carbonyl clu~ters may be introduced to the reaction in a condition which allows them to be ~olubilized, and under the conditions of the reaction they are converted into carbonyl complexe~
which efectively catalyze the reaction. The composition and ~tructure o~ the ruthenium carbonyl complexes which catalyze the desired reaction are not specifically known but their presence is indicated by a ~79~5 13,142 mixture of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i.e., )3I3 and HRu3(C0)11 - having characteristic infrared spectrum characterized by three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus lOcm 1 of about 2100cm 1, 2015cm, and l900cm 1 Varied reaction conditions, solvents, ligands, counter-ions, promoters (if employed), may result in different amounts of the desired products of the process, and different rates, efficiencies and/or yields, but it is believed that, although each provides a different and distinct catalytic environment that the ~ynergistic mixture of ruthenium carbonyls aforementioned and the characteristic infrared spectrum will be present.
The aforementioned ruthenium carbonyl catalyst of this invention is also characterized by having an average oxidation state of between about -0.2 and about 0.25. The average oxidation state of the synergistic combination of the ruthenium carbonyl complexes is calculated by taking the oxidation state of a ruthenium atom in HRu3~Co)ll- as -1/3 and the oxidation state of a ruthenium atom in Ru~C0)3I3- a~ ~2.
Accordinyly, the avera~e oxidation ~tate of a 2:1 molar f HRu3(C0)11- to Ru(C0)3I3- is zero and ~uch average oxidation ~tate is most preferred.
Similarly, as above discussed, ruthenium-containing compourld~ which provide the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst of this invention may be employed.
~ ~, ~ ~7~ 13,142 The ruthenium-containing substances which may be employed in the practice of this invention to form the catalyst, as characterized by the synergistic ruthenium carbonyl mixture, under proces~ conditions encompass those which are described, for example, in Gresham, U.S. Patent No. 2,535,060 at column 2, starting at line 38 to line 48, and ruthenium carbonyl compounds. It generally is not advisable to place ruthenium compounds or substances on a support material for use in t'ne process of this invention because such offers no benefits over solubiliziny such ruthenium compounds in combination with the aforementioned solvent and/or promoter. Moreover, ruthenium deposited on a ~upport material can be expected to be solubilized in the homogeneous liquid phase reaction system of this invention as it is contacted with carbon monoxide.
Ruthenium oxides, such as dioxide, sesquioxide, or tetraoxide, may be converted to the ruthenium carbonyl complex employed in the proces~ o thi~ invention.
Ruthenium carbonyl compounds (which include ruthenium carbonyl Aydrides or ruthenium carbonyl clusters) are already provided with a carbonyl ligand, and under the conditions of the reaction can be sufficiently changed to achieve the de~ired catalytic affect. Ruthenium salts such as those of organic acids can be employed in the practice o~ this invention to produce the cataly~t.
In addition to those ruthenium compounds described in the aforementioned Gresham patent, one may employ ruthenium commpounds of bidentate ligands, allyl , , . .~
~ ~7931 ~
13,142 complexes, arene complexes, halides, and alkyl complexes. The choice of ruthenium compounds i5 varied and not critical to this invention so long as the aforementioned characteristic infrared spectrum is observed. A number of ruthenium complexes are known to be more stable to the presence of carbon monoxide than other ruthenium compounds and the skilled worker can determine which particular ruthenium compound might take longer to initiate a reaction than other rutheniu~
compounds. On that basis, one can select for the ~urposes of convenience the particular ruthenium compound to be utilized in forming the catalyst.
However, ruthenium which is associated with an organic molecule or complexed with carbon monoxide is most readily solubilized ~o as to provide a readily available source of the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst of this process.
Although the exact nature of the actual ruthenium catalyst is not precisely known the presence of an active catalytic system is indicated by the presence either before, during or after the process is carried out o a synergistic mixture of Ru(CO)3I3 and E~R3~CO)ll~ This mixture can be initially provided to the proce~s or formed in situ, such as by the reaction of Ru3(CO)l2 with excess I as follows:
7/3 Ru~C0)l2 + 3I +H2 2~Ru3(CO~ll +Ru~C0)3I3 ~ 3co , ~ ~7g~
13,142 Selection of the ruthenium-containing starting material is important if in situ formation is desired since it has been observed that use of Ru~II) or Ru(III) halide complexes which do not form the synergistic mixture of Ru(C0)3I3 and HRu3(C0)11 do not provide the ruthenium catalyst employed in the process of this invention. However, such Ru(II) or Ru(III) complexes may be converted to the ruthenium catalyst according to this invention by reaction with an appropriate base and an iodide containing compound. For example, if the ruthenium compound is RuI3 the following depicts the conversion of such compound:
(1) 7/3 RuI3 ~ 210H + 25C0 + 23/2 H~
Ru(co)3I3 + 2HRu3(C0)11+ 18I ~ 21H20 The complex Ru(C0)3I3- may be converted to an active Ru catalyst as follows-(2) 7Ru(C03)3I3- ~ 140H ~8H2+4C0 ( )3I3 ~ 2HRu3(C0)11 + 18I + 14H20 Similarly, the Ru catalyst according to the invention may be prepared by employing HRu3(C0)11 as follows:
(3) 7/3HRu3~C0)11-~ 7/6I2-t 2/3 I
RU(C0)3I3-+2HRU3(C0)11~ 2/3 C0~ H2 In addition, the presence of the ruthenium complex catalyst of this invention is indicated by a reaction medium having an infrared spectrum characterized by ~ :~ 793:~ 5 13,142 three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus lOcm 1 of about 2100cm 1, 2015cm 1 and l990cm 1.
As characterized by equations (1), (2) and (3) the ormation of the catalyst according to this invention is inhibited by the addition of base (reducing agent) and acid (oxidizing agent) beyond that required to give the ruthenium catalyst.
As characterized above, this process is operated as a homogeneous liquid phase mixture. The process is typically carried out in a solvent for the catalyst. The solvent is a liquid in which the cataly~;t components are soluble under the prescribed conditions of the reaction. The solvent may be solid at room temperature but should at least, in part, be a liquid under the conditions o reaction.
A preferred solvent iq a liquid at reaction conditions which is polar or complexes ions. Of the polar solvents those which have a relatively high dielectric constant are more preferred. As for the ~olvents which complex ions, the desirable solvents are those which under the reaction conditions have th~
capacity o~ aomplexing ions such as available cations.
As stated previously, the solvent may provide a promoter aomponent~ Solvents having a dielectric constant at 25C. or at its melting temperature, whichever is hlgher, o~ greater than 2 are preferred.
Illustrative o suitable polar solvents are, e.g., water, ketones, esters including lactones, amides ~ 1793~ 5 13,142 including lactams, sulfones, sulfoxides, halogenated hydrocarbons, aromatic hydrocarbons, and the like.
Illustrative of specific solvents encompassed by the above classes of polar solvents are, for example, aromatic hydroc~rbons, e.g., benzene, toluene, xyle~e, naphthalene, alkylnaphthalene, etc.; carboxylic acids such as acetic acid, propionic acid, butyric acid, caproic acid, stearic acid, benzoic acid, cyclohexane-carboxylic acid, etc~; ketones such as acetone, methyl ethyl ketone, cyclohexanone, cyclopentanone, etc.;
esters such as me~hyl acetate, ethyl acetate, propyl acetate, butyl acetate, methyl propionate, ethyl butyrate, methyl laurate, etc.; anhydrides such as phthalic anhydride, acetic anhydride, etc.; lactams such as N-alkyl caprolactams, SUch as N-methylcaprolactam;
N-alkyl pyrrolidinones such as N-methyl pyrrolidinone;
cyclic ureas such as N,N'-dimethylimidazolidone; polyols such as ethylene glycol, glycerine, erythritol, polyalkylene glycol containing two to about ten thousand repeating units; lactones such as gamma-butyrolactone;
halogenated hydrocarbons sush as chlorobenzene, chloro~orm, methylene chloride, 2,2-dichloropropane;
amides such as dimethylformamide, dimethylacetamide, hexamethyl- phophoramide; sulfones such as sul~olane, dimethylsulfone; substituted ~ul~olanes; 3ulfoxide~ such as dimethylsulfoxide, diphenyl sulfoxide; a~ well as many others.
Illustrative of suitable complexing solvents are the ethers, cryptand~, and the like. Illustrative ~ ~793~5 l3,l42 of speciic solvents encompassed by the above classes of complexing solvents are, for example, ethers such as tetrahydrofuran, tstrahydropyran, diethyl ether, 1,2-dimethoxybenzene, 1,2-diethoxybenzene, the mono and dialkyl ethers oE alkylene and polyalkylene glycols, such as ethylene glycol, of 1,2-propylene glycol, oE
1,2-butylene ylycol, of diethylene glycol, of di-1,2-propylene glycol, oE triethylene glycol, of pentaethylene glycol (such as triglyme, tetraglyme and pentaglyme), of di-1,2-butylene glycol, of oxyethylene-oxypropylene glycols, etc., preferably those in which the alkylene group contains 2 and/or 3 carbon atoms in the divalent moiety, such as ethylene and 1,2-propylene; the cryptands such as described in U.S.
Patent ~o. 4,111,975; the crown ethers ~or Crown Ethers, as one may prefer) such as described in U.S. Patent No.
4,1~2,261; as well as many others.
The choice of solvent in any particular case can be a complex decision. For example, the carboxylic acids, if employed, are also reactive with ethylene glycol, methanol and ethanol products, to produce ethylene glycol dicarboxylates, methyl carboxylates, and ethyl carboxylate~. These carboxylates can be readily hydrolyzed to produce the alcohol products. This is not neces~arily an uneconomical method to produce such products.
An important class oE solvents contemplated in the practice of this invention is a mixture of the aforementioned polar ~olvents and the complexing .... ... .
~179~
13,142 solvents. Various polar solvents mixed with other polar or complexing solvents are contemplated to provide enhanced results either in terms of rates, selectivity, conversions and/or yields of one or more of the desired products. ~hich mixtures will achieve what result has not been determined. Combinations of, e.g., sulfolane with crown ethers, lactones/ amides or ureas are contemplated as potentially useful. Combinations of~
e.g., crown ethers with lactones, amides, and ureas are contemplated as potentially useful.
The iodide-containing compounds employed herein may compri~e most any iodide containing compound, including such compounds as iodide salts of metals such as alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, cobalt diiodide, iron (II) iodide and the like. organic iodide containing compounds may also be employed, e.g. bis(tri-phenylpho~phine)iminium iodide; tetramethylammonium iodide, triethylammonium iodide; pyridinium iodide;
tetra-n-propylammonium iodide; tetra-n-butylammonium iodide; tetraphenylphospnonium iodide; tetraphenyl-ar30nium iodide; tetra-n-butylphosphonium iodide7 phenyltrimethylammonium iodide; and the like. The addition of ~uch iodide salts is beneficial to provide the formation of ethylene glycol at a substantial rate.
Generally, an increase in the concentration of iodide promoter increa~es the overall rate to ethylene glycol although the selectivity to glycol may decrease.
It is believed that the process may be carried out in the presence of a promoter although selection of - - . .
1 ~7~3~ ~ 13,142 t'he promoter is not clearly understood. A promoter, in the context of this invention, is a material provided to the reaction w~hich provides a promotional effect in that it en~hances t'he production (viz., rate, yield, or efficiency) of any of the products, or it improves the selectivity of the reaction toward the products.
The promoter can be any material used in miniscule quantities to a material employed in maximum quantities the effectiveness of w'hich will in large measure be dependent upon t'he reaction conditions selected. Representative of the promoters employed in the instant process are iodide containing compounds. It is believed that other Lewis base promoters may also be employed, as aforementioned.
Though the process of this invention is capable of providing a combination of ethylene glycol, ethanol and methanol, in many instances one or more of them is formed as a minor component only~ Because ethylene glycol is the most valued of the products, its production obviously makes this process attractive. By the same reasoning, ethanol's higher market value than met'hanol also enhances the aommercial attractiveness of this process. A proce~s which produces the same amount of ethylene glycol and produces more ethanol will have more commercial attractiveness, assuming all other factors are equal.
The relative amounts of carbon monoxide and hydrogen whic'h are initially present in the reaction mixture can be varied over a wide range. In general, ~ ~793 ~ ~
` 13,142 the molar ratio of Co:~2 is in the range of from about 40:1 to about 1:40, suitably from about 20:1 to about 1:20, and preferably from about 10:1 to about 1:10. It is to be understood, however, that molar ratios o~tside the broadest of these ranges may be employed.
Substances or reaction mixtures which give rise to the formation of carbon monoxide and hydrogen under the reaction conditions may be employed instead of the mixtures comprising carbon monoxide and hydrogen which are used in preferred embodiments in the practice of the invention. For instance, the product alcohols are contemplated as obtainable by using mixtures containing carbon dioxide and hydrogen. Mixtures of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and hydrogen can also be employed. If desired, the reaction mixture can comprise ~team and carbon monoxide.
The quantity of catalyst employed is not narrowly critical and can vary over a wide range. In general, the process is desirably conducted in the presence of a catalytically effective quantity of the active ruthenium species which gives a suitable and rea~onable reaction rate. The presence of the catalytic ~pecies is indicated by the presence of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i.e., Ru(C0)3I3 and HRu3(C0)11~ It has been observed that the rate of ethylene glycol formation i8 related to the ratio of these complexes such that although their combined presence indicates the presence of the active ruthenium catalyst, the rate to ethylene glycol increases if the ' ll~9~ ~
13,142 mole ratio of RutC0)3I3 to HRu3(CO)ll is between about .01 and about 2, preferably between about O.2 and about 1. The reaction can proceed when employing as little as about 1 x 10 6 weight percent, and even lesser amounts, of ruthenium based on the total weight of reaction mixture (i.e., the liquid phase mixture). The upper concentration limit can be quite high, e.g., about 30 weight percent ruthenium, and higher, and the realistic upper limit in practicing the invention appears to be dictated and controlled more by economics in view of the cost of ruthenium. Since the rate of conversion of synthesis gas may be dependent upon the concentration of ruthenium employed, higher concentrations achieving higher rates, then large concentrations may prove to be a most de~irable embodiment of this invention. Depending on various factors such as the promoter (if employed), the partial pressures of carbon monoxide and hydrogen, the total operative pressure of the system, the operative temperature, the choice of solvent, and other con~ideration~, a catalyst concentration of from about 1 x 10 to about 20 weight percent ruthenium ~contained in the complex catalyst) based on the total weight o~ reaction mixture, i5 generally desirable in the practice of the invention.
The temperature which may be employed in practicing the process may vary over a wide range of elevated temperatures. In general, the process can be conducted at a temperature between 50C. and about . , 9 3 :1 5 13, 142 400C. and higher. Temperatures outside this stated range, though not excluded from the scope of the invention, do not fall within certain desirable embodiments of the inven~ion. At the lower end of the temperature range, and lower, the rate of reaction to desired product becomes markedly slow. At the upper temperature range, and beyond, catalyst, solvent, or promoter instability may occur. Notwithstanding these factors, reaction will continue and the alcohols and/or their derivatives will be produced. Additionally, one should take notice of the e~uilibrium reaction for forming ethylene glycol:
2 CO + 3H2 = HOCH2CH2OH
At relatively higA temperatures the equilibrium increasingly favors the left hand side of the equation.
To drive the reaction to the formation of increased quantities of ethylene glycol, higher partial pressures of carbon monoxide and Aydrogen are required. Processes based on correspondingly higher operative pressures, however, do not represent preferred embodiments of the invention in view of the high investment cGsts associated with erecting chemical plants which utilize high pressure utilities and the necessity of fabricating equipment capable of withstanding such enormous pre~sure~. Pre~erred temperatures are between about 100C. and about 350C., and, most desirably, between about 150C. and about 300C.
The process is ~uitably effected over a wide superatmospheric pressure range. At pres~ures in the - 33 ~
''~
l~7~31~
13,142 direction of and below about 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm2) the rate of desired product formation is quite slow, and conse~uently, relatively faster -reaction rates and/or higher conversions to the desired products can be obtained by employing higher pressures, e.g., pressures of at least about 1,000 psia (70.31 kg/cm ).
Pressures as high as 20,000 to 50,000 psia (3,515.35 kg/cm ), and higher, can be employed but there is no apparent advantage in using such pressures, and any advantage that could be reasonably contemplated would be easily offset by the very unattractive plant investment outlay required for such high pressure equipment and the costs as~ociated with such high pressure operations.
Therefore, the upper pre~sure limitation is approxi-mately 15,000 psia (1,054~6 kg/cm ). Effecting the process below about 15,000 (1,054.6 kg/cm ), especially below about 10,000 psia (703.1 kg/cm2), results in significant cost advantages which are as~ociated with lower pressure equipment requirements and operating co~t~. A suitable pressure range is from about 500 p~ia (35.15 kg/cm ) to about 1~,000 psia (878.84 kg/cm ). The pres~ure referred to above represents the total pressure of hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
The process is effec~ed or a period of time sufficient to produce the desired alcohol products and/or derivative~ thereof. In general, the residence time to produce the desired products can vary from minutes to a number of hours, e.g., from a few minutes .
~ ~9~1 5 13,142 to 24 hours, and lon~er. It is readily appreciated that the residence period (time) will be influenced ~o a significant extent by the reaction temperature, the concentration and choice of pro~oter and rutheniu~
source, t~e total gas pressure and the partial pressure exerted by its components, the concentration and choice of solvent, and other factors. The synthesis oE the desired product(s) by the reaction of hydrogen with carbon monoxide is suitably conducted under operative condition which give reasonable reaction rates and/or conversions.
The process can be executed in a batch, semi-continuous, or continuous fashion. The reaction can be conducted in a single reaction zone or a plurality of reaction zones, in serie~ or in parallel, or it may be conducted intermittantly or continuously in an elongated tubular zone or series of such ~ones. The material of construction should be such that it is inert during the reaction and the fabrication o the equipment should be able to withstand the reaction temperature and pressure. The reaction zone can be fitted with internal and/or external heat exchanger(s) to thus control undue temperature fluctuation~, or to prevent any pos~ible "run-away" reaction temperatures due to the exothermic nature of the reaction. In pre~erred embodiments of the invention, agitation means to vary the degree o~ mixing o the reaction mixture can be suitably employed.
Mixing induced by vibration, shaker, stirrer, rotatory, oscillation, ultrasonic, etc., are all illu trative of ~ ~7g3:~ ~
13,142 the types of agitation means which are contemplated.
Such means are available and well-known to the art. The catalyst precursor may be initially introduced into the reaction zone batchwise, or it may be continuously or intermittently introduced into such zone during the course of the synthesis reaction. Means to introduce and/or adjust the reactants, either inter~ittently or continuously, into the reaction zone during the course of the reaction can be conveniently utilized in the process especially to maintain the desired molar ratios of, and the partial pressuras exerted by, the reactants~
As intimated previously, the operative conditions can be adjusted to optimize the conversion of the desired product and/or the economics of the process. In a continuous process, for instance, when it is preferred to operate at relatively low conversions, it i~ generally desirable to recirculate unreacted synthesis gas with/without make-up carbon monoxide and hydrogen to the reactor. Recovery of the desired product can be achieved by methods well-known in the art such as by distillation, fractionation, extraction, and the like. A Eraction compri~ing ruthenium complexes, generally contained in byproducts and/or the solvent, can be recycled to the reaction zone, if desired. All or a portion of such fraction can be removed or recovery o~ the ruthenium values or regeneration thereo~, if nece~sary. Fresh ruthenium precursor, promoter and/or solvent, can be intermittently added to the recycle stream or directly to the reaction zone, if needed.
, ''~'' 11~79~5 13,142 Many embodiments of the ruthenium carbonyl complexes, promoter and solvent combinations encompassed by this invention are sufficiently stable to allow repeated use of the ruthenium carbonyl complexes. This is especially noted when the promoter is an alkali metal halide, particularly, and preferably, an alkali metal iodide. For example, the process of this invention can be continuously operated in a pressuxe reactor into which is continuously fed synthesis gas. The velocity of the synthesis gas is sufficient to strip products o~
the reaction out of the reactor leaving behind in the reactor the ruthenium carbonyl complex, promoter and ~olvent combination. The products are separated from the unreacted synthesis gas and the synthesis gas i9 recycled to the reactor. The products, i~ this embodiment, are recovered free of ruthenium, Lewis base, if employed, and solvent. In this embodiment, the catalyst need not be removed from the reactor to a recovery zone or separatiny product. Thus a catalyst treatlnent step is avoided. The examples below depict batch reactions; however, the above continuou~ gas recycle process can be operated in a similar manner.
That i~, the batch reactor simulates the continuous reactor except for the gas sparging and continuous gas recycle.
Although this invention has been de~cribed with respect to a number of details, it is not intended that this invention should be limited thereby. Moreover, the examples which ~ollow are intended solely to illustrate , :
~ ~ 79~ ~ 5 13,142 a variety of, including the most favorable, embodiments of this invention and are not intended in any way to limit the scope and the intent of this invention.
XPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE
The following procedure was employed in the examples recorded below;
A 150 ml. capacity stainless steel reactor capable of withstanding pressures up to 3,000 atmo~pheres was charged with a mixture of solvent, catalyst precursox, and, optionally, a promoter, as indicated below. The reactor was sealed and charged with carbon monoxide to a pressure of S00 pounds per square inch gauge (psig), 36.19 kg/cm2. In some cases the gaseous contents of the reactor are vented to remove oxygen. In these cases the reactor is then repressuriæed to about 500 psig. (This venting procedure may be repeated if desired.) Heat was then applied to the reactor and its contents, (initially at about 55C. or as otherwise indicated); when the temperature of the mixture inside the reactor reached the designated reaction temperature, a~ mea~ured hy a suitable placed thermocouple, addition of caxbon monoxide and hydrogen (H~:C0 equals the designated mole ratio) was made to bring the pres~ure to the ~peci~ied reaction pressure. ~he temperature was maintained at the de~ired value ~or the reported time period. ~uring this period of time, additional carbon monoxide and hydrogen were added whenever the pressure .~
13,142 inside the reactor dropped by more than about 500 psig.
(36.19 kg/cm ) over the entire reaction periodO
Ater the reaction period, the reaction vessel was cooled to room temperature, the reaction vessel vented and the reaction products removed. Analysis of the reaction mixture was made by gas chromatograp~lic methods.
The variou~ rates set forth in the ~ollowing examples are averaye rates for the particular product and are determined by measuring the net production of product for the reaction period and assuming a nominal reaction volume of 75 ml.
In the following e~amples, the following procedure was employed:
The infrared spectra of the reaction mixtures were analyzed by withdrawing a sample from a sample bottle blanketed with a nitrogen atmosphere. The sample is placed in an infrared cell having CaF2 windows separated by a 0.1 mm spacer. I necessary, the sample was diluted with the solvent employed in carrying out the reaction. The infrared spectra were recording using a Perkin-Elmer 281B (TM) inrared spectrophotometer with an inrared cell containing reactor solvent being placed in the resrence beam.
FIGS. 1-3 show, re~pectively, the inrared spectra o PPN[Ru¦CO)3I3] in CH2C12;
PPNcHRu3(cO)ll~ in CH2C12; and of a mixture of PPN[HRu3(Co)ll~ and PPN~Ru(CO)3I3] at a 2:1 molar ratio, in ~ulolane. FI~. 4 and FIG. 5 show, '`;~`' ~ ~793~5 l3,l42 respectively, the infrared spectra of reaction mixtures (after catalysis) from Examples 1 and 4.
EX~MP~ES 1-12 The following examples were carried out to demonstrate the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst employed in the process of the invention as indicated by the presence of a synergistic mixture of Ru(CO)3T3 and HRu(CO)ll. In each example, as set forth in Table I, the indicated ruthenium carbonyl complex was employed according to the above described experimental procedure. The process conditions, number o millimoles of ruthenium carbonyl employed, rate of formation of ethylene glycol, rate of formation of methanol and milligram atoms of ruthenium ar~ set forth in Table I.
The following examples were carried out to determine the ratio o Ru(CO33I3 to HRu3(CO)ll to be employed in the process.
Examples 14 to 19, inclusive, were carried out by employing 1.72 milIimoles of PPN[HRu3(CO~ while varying the amount of PPN~RutCO)3I3~ as shown for examples 14 to 19 in Table II. Example~ 20 to 25, inclusive, were carried by employing 0.86 millimoles of PP~u(CO)3I3 while varying the amount of PPN~HRu3(CO)~ as shown in Table II.
The results of examples 13 to 25 are graphically displayed in Figures 7 and 8.
-- ~0 --~'` '' 3 ,142 ~ ~ 7 TABLE Ia Example Complexmmoles Ru, mg-atom EG Rate MeOH Rate 1 Ru3(co)l2 2.0 6.0 .38 2.28 2 PPN[HRu3(CO~11] 2.0 6.0 .10 1.64 3 PPN[HRu3(C0)3I3~6.0 6.0 0 4 PPN[HRu3(CO)11]1.72 6.0 .41 2.92 PPN[Ru(CQ)3I3] 0.86 PpN[HRu3(co)ll 1.72 6.9 .47 2.90 PPNtRu(CO)3I3] 1.72 6 PPNLHRu3(CO)11] 3-44 11.2 .48 2.92 PPN[Ru(CO)3I3] 0.86 7 PPN[HRu3(CO)11]1.72 6.0 .17b l.lob PPN[Ru(CO)3I3] 0.86 8 (PpN)2[Ru6c(co)l6] 1.0 6.0 oll 1~19 g (PpN)2~Ru6c(co)l6] 0.86 6.0 o 0.16 PPN~Ru(CO)3I3] 0.86 (PPN)2[RU6c(cc)l6] 1.0 12.0 .45 2.55 RU3(co)l2 2.0 11 RU3(cQ)l2 1.0 3.0 .35 1.58 12 RU3(C0)12 1.0 3.0 .35C l.glc -Conditions: 75 mL sulfolane solvent, 12500 psi 1:1 H2tCO, 230C, 18 mmoles NaI. Rates are M hr~l. (PPN = bis[bis[triphenylphosphine] iminium).
; b No NaI promoter.
c PPNI (18 mmoles) instead of NaI.
:
;~ , ~.
3 ,142 ~ ~ 7 9 ~ ~ 5 TABLE IIa PPN[Ru(CO)3I3] PPN[HRu3(CO)ll] Total Ru EC Rate MeOH Rate Example (~noles) (~moles) ~g-atoms M hr~l M hr~
13 - - 6.00 .55 4.62 14 .21 1.72 5.37 .18 2.60 .42 1.72 5.59 .24 2.95 16 .86 1.72 6.00 .53 4.67 17 1.72 1.72 6.88 .54 5.55 18 3.44 1.72 8.60 .19 2.84 19 6.88 1.72 12.04 .02 0.08 .86 .21 1.49 .01 0.10 21 .86 .43 2.15 .02 0.11 22 .86 .86 3.44 .11 1.66 23 .86 1.72 6.00 .53 4.67 24 .86 3.~4 11.18 .48 4.21 .86 6.88 21.50 .41 5.43 -a Conditions: 75 mL sulfolane solvent, 12500 psi 1:1 H2/CO, 230, 36 mmoles NaI. (PPN = bis~triphenylphosphine]iminium).
b Charged as Ru3(CO)12; standard run.
" -, . . _. . . ~, . .
~ ~793~
13,142 -A catalytic reaction was begun as described above, employing 1 mmole of Ru3(C0)12, 18 mmoles of KI, and 75 ml of sulfolane solvent under a total pressure of 8000 psi of synthe~is gas (1:1 H2:C0), at 230C. The infrared spectrum of the catalytic solution was recorded during catalysis by use of the high-pressure infrared cell and ~pectrophotometer described elsewhere (J.L. Vidal and W.E. Walker, Inorg. Chem., 19, pages 896-903 (1980)). The infrared spectra of the catalytic solution i~ depicted in Figure 6.
The choice of solvent in any particular case can be a complex decision. For example, the carboxylic acids, if employed, are also reactive with ethylene glycol, methanol and ethanol products, to produce ethylene glycol dicarboxylates, methyl carboxylates, and ethyl carboxylate~. These carboxylates can be readily hydrolyzed to produce the alcohol products. This is not neces~arily an uneconomical method to produce such products.
An important class oE solvents contemplated in the practice of this invention is a mixture of the aforementioned polar ~olvents and the complexing .... ... .
~179~
13,142 solvents. Various polar solvents mixed with other polar or complexing solvents are contemplated to provide enhanced results either in terms of rates, selectivity, conversions and/or yields of one or more of the desired products. ~hich mixtures will achieve what result has not been determined. Combinations of, e.g., sulfolane with crown ethers, lactones/ amides or ureas are contemplated as potentially useful. Combinations of~
e.g., crown ethers with lactones, amides, and ureas are contemplated as potentially useful.
The iodide-containing compounds employed herein may compri~e most any iodide containing compound, including such compounds as iodide salts of metals such as alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, cobalt diiodide, iron (II) iodide and the like. organic iodide containing compounds may also be employed, e.g. bis(tri-phenylpho~phine)iminium iodide; tetramethylammonium iodide, triethylammonium iodide; pyridinium iodide;
tetra-n-propylammonium iodide; tetra-n-butylammonium iodide; tetraphenylphospnonium iodide; tetraphenyl-ar30nium iodide; tetra-n-butylphosphonium iodide7 phenyltrimethylammonium iodide; and the like. The addition of ~uch iodide salts is beneficial to provide the formation of ethylene glycol at a substantial rate.
Generally, an increase in the concentration of iodide promoter increa~es the overall rate to ethylene glycol although the selectivity to glycol may decrease.
It is believed that the process may be carried out in the presence of a promoter although selection of - - . .
1 ~7~3~ ~ 13,142 t'he promoter is not clearly understood. A promoter, in the context of this invention, is a material provided to the reaction w~hich provides a promotional effect in that it en~hances t'he production (viz., rate, yield, or efficiency) of any of the products, or it improves the selectivity of the reaction toward the products.
The promoter can be any material used in miniscule quantities to a material employed in maximum quantities the effectiveness of w'hich will in large measure be dependent upon t'he reaction conditions selected. Representative of the promoters employed in the instant process are iodide containing compounds. It is believed that other Lewis base promoters may also be employed, as aforementioned.
Though the process of this invention is capable of providing a combination of ethylene glycol, ethanol and methanol, in many instances one or more of them is formed as a minor component only~ Because ethylene glycol is the most valued of the products, its production obviously makes this process attractive. By the same reasoning, ethanol's higher market value than met'hanol also enhances the aommercial attractiveness of this process. A proce~s which produces the same amount of ethylene glycol and produces more ethanol will have more commercial attractiveness, assuming all other factors are equal.
The relative amounts of carbon monoxide and hydrogen whic'h are initially present in the reaction mixture can be varied over a wide range. In general, ~ ~793 ~ ~
` 13,142 the molar ratio of Co:~2 is in the range of from about 40:1 to about 1:40, suitably from about 20:1 to about 1:20, and preferably from about 10:1 to about 1:10. It is to be understood, however, that molar ratios o~tside the broadest of these ranges may be employed.
Substances or reaction mixtures which give rise to the formation of carbon monoxide and hydrogen under the reaction conditions may be employed instead of the mixtures comprising carbon monoxide and hydrogen which are used in preferred embodiments in the practice of the invention. For instance, the product alcohols are contemplated as obtainable by using mixtures containing carbon dioxide and hydrogen. Mixtures of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and hydrogen can also be employed. If desired, the reaction mixture can comprise ~team and carbon monoxide.
The quantity of catalyst employed is not narrowly critical and can vary over a wide range. In general, the process is desirably conducted in the presence of a catalytically effective quantity of the active ruthenium species which gives a suitable and rea~onable reaction rate. The presence of the catalytic ~pecies is indicated by the presence of two ruthenium carbonyl complexes, i.e., Ru(C0)3I3 and HRu3(C0)11~ It has been observed that the rate of ethylene glycol formation i8 related to the ratio of these complexes such that although their combined presence indicates the presence of the active ruthenium catalyst, the rate to ethylene glycol increases if the ' ll~9~ ~
13,142 mole ratio of RutC0)3I3 to HRu3(CO)ll is between about .01 and about 2, preferably between about O.2 and about 1. The reaction can proceed when employing as little as about 1 x 10 6 weight percent, and even lesser amounts, of ruthenium based on the total weight of reaction mixture (i.e., the liquid phase mixture). The upper concentration limit can be quite high, e.g., about 30 weight percent ruthenium, and higher, and the realistic upper limit in practicing the invention appears to be dictated and controlled more by economics in view of the cost of ruthenium. Since the rate of conversion of synthesis gas may be dependent upon the concentration of ruthenium employed, higher concentrations achieving higher rates, then large concentrations may prove to be a most de~irable embodiment of this invention. Depending on various factors such as the promoter (if employed), the partial pressures of carbon monoxide and hydrogen, the total operative pressure of the system, the operative temperature, the choice of solvent, and other con~ideration~, a catalyst concentration of from about 1 x 10 to about 20 weight percent ruthenium ~contained in the complex catalyst) based on the total weight o~ reaction mixture, i5 generally desirable in the practice of the invention.
The temperature which may be employed in practicing the process may vary over a wide range of elevated temperatures. In general, the process can be conducted at a temperature between 50C. and about . , 9 3 :1 5 13, 142 400C. and higher. Temperatures outside this stated range, though not excluded from the scope of the invention, do not fall within certain desirable embodiments of the inven~ion. At the lower end of the temperature range, and lower, the rate of reaction to desired product becomes markedly slow. At the upper temperature range, and beyond, catalyst, solvent, or promoter instability may occur. Notwithstanding these factors, reaction will continue and the alcohols and/or their derivatives will be produced. Additionally, one should take notice of the e~uilibrium reaction for forming ethylene glycol:
2 CO + 3H2 = HOCH2CH2OH
At relatively higA temperatures the equilibrium increasingly favors the left hand side of the equation.
To drive the reaction to the formation of increased quantities of ethylene glycol, higher partial pressures of carbon monoxide and Aydrogen are required. Processes based on correspondingly higher operative pressures, however, do not represent preferred embodiments of the invention in view of the high investment cGsts associated with erecting chemical plants which utilize high pressure utilities and the necessity of fabricating equipment capable of withstanding such enormous pre~sure~. Pre~erred temperatures are between about 100C. and about 350C., and, most desirably, between about 150C. and about 300C.
The process is ~uitably effected over a wide superatmospheric pressure range. At pres~ures in the - 33 ~
''~
l~7~31~
13,142 direction of and below about 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm2) the rate of desired product formation is quite slow, and conse~uently, relatively faster -reaction rates and/or higher conversions to the desired products can be obtained by employing higher pressures, e.g., pressures of at least about 1,000 psia (70.31 kg/cm ).
Pressures as high as 20,000 to 50,000 psia (3,515.35 kg/cm ), and higher, can be employed but there is no apparent advantage in using such pressures, and any advantage that could be reasonably contemplated would be easily offset by the very unattractive plant investment outlay required for such high pressure equipment and the costs as~ociated with such high pressure operations.
Therefore, the upper pre~sure limitation is approxi-mately 15,000 psia (1,054~6 kg/cm ). Effecting the process below about 15,000 (1,054.6 kg/cm ), especially below about 10,000 psia (703.1 kg/cm2), results in significant cost advantages which are as~ociated with lower pressure equipment requirements and operating co~t~. A suitable pressure range is from about 500 p~ia (35.15 kg/cm ) to about 1~,000 psia (878.84 kg/cm ). The pres~ure referred to above represents the total pressure of hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
The process is effec~ed or a period of time sufficient to produce the desired alcohol products and/or derivative~ thereof. In general, the residence time to produce the desired products can vary from minutes to a number of hours, e.g., from a few minutes .
~ ~9~1 5 13,142 to 24 hours, and lon~er. It is readily appreciated that the residence period (time) will be influenced ~o a significant extent by the reaction temperature, the concentration and choice of pro~oter and rutheniu~
source, t~e total gas pressure and the partial pressure exerted by its components, the concentration and choice of solvent, and other factors. The synthesis oE the desired product(s) by the reaction of hydrogen with carbon monoxide is suitably conducted under operative condition which give reasonable reaction rates and/or conversions.
The process can be executed in a batch, semi-continuous, or continuous fashion. The reaction can be conducted in a single reaction zone or a plurality of reaction zones, in serie~ or in parallel, or it may be conducted intermittantly or continuously in an elongated tubular zone or series of such ~ones. The material of construction should be such that it is inert during the reaction and the fabrication o the equipment should be able to withstand the reaction temperature and pressure. The reaction zone can be fitted with internal and/or external heat exchanger(s) to thus control undue temperature fluctuation~, or to prevent any pos~ible "run-away" reaction temperatures due to the exothermic nature of the reaction. In pre~erred embodiments of the invention, agitation means to vary the degree o~ mixing o the reaction mixture can be suitably employed.
Mixing induced by vibration, shaker, stirrer, rotatory, oscillation, ultrasonic, etc., are all illu trative of ~ ~7g3:~ ~
13,142 the types of agitation means which are contemplated.
Such means are available and well-known to the art. The catalyst precursor may be initially introduced into the reaction zone batchwise, or it may be continuously or intermittently introduced into such zone during the course of the synthesis reaction. Means to introduce and/or adjust the reactants, either inter~ittently or continuously, into the reaction zone during the course of the reaction can be conveniently utilized in the process especially to maintain the desired molar ratios of, and the partial pressuras exerted by, the reactants~
As intimated previously, the operative conditions can be adjusted to optimize the conversion of the desired product and/or the economics of the process. In a continuous process, for instance, when it is preferred to operate at relatively low conversions, it i~ generally desirable to recirculate unreacted synthesis gas with/without make-up carbon monoxide and hydrogen to the reactor. Recovery of the desired product can be achieved by methods well-known in the art such as by distillation, fractionation, extraction, and the like. A Eraction compri~ing ruthenium complexes, generally contained in byproducts and/or the solvent, can be recycled to the reaction zone, if desired. All or a portion of such fraction can be removed or recovery o~ the ruthenium values or regeneration thereo~, if nece~sary. Fresh ruthenium precursor, promoter and/or solvent, can be intermittently added to the recycle stream or directly to the reaction zone, if needed.
, ''~'' 11~79~5 13,142 Many embodiments of the ruthenium carbonyl complexes, promoter and solvent combinations encompassed by this invention are sufficiently stable to allow repeated use of the ruthenium carbonyl complexes. This is especially noted when the promoter is an alkali metal halide, particularly, and preferably, an alkali metal iodide. For example, the process of this invention can be continuously operated in a pressuxe reactor into which is continuously fed synthesis gas. The velocity of the synthesis gas is sufficient to strip products o~
the reaction out of the reactor leaving behind in the reactor the ruthenium carbonyl complex, promoter and ~olvent combination. The products are separated from the unreacted synthesis gas and the synthesis gas i9 recycled to the reactor. The products, i~ this embodiment, are recovered free of ruthenium, Lewis base, if employed, and solvent. In this embodiment, the catalyst need not be removed from the reactor to a recovery zone or separatiny product. Thus a catalyst treatlnent step is avoided. The examples below depict batch reactions; however, the above continuou~ gas recycle process can be operated in a similar manner.
That i~, the batch reactor simulates the continuous reactor except for the gas sparging and continuous gas recycle.
Although this invention has been de~cribed with respect to a number of details, it is not intended that this invention should be limited thereby. Moreover, the examples which ~ollow are intended solely to illustrate , :
~ ~ 79~ ~ 5 13,142 a variety of, including the most favorable, embodiments of this invention and are not intended in any way to limit the scope and the intent of this invention.
XPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE
The following procedure was employed in the examples recorded below;
A 150 ml. capacity stainless steel reactor capable of withstanding pressures up to 3,000 atmo~pheres was charged with a mixture of solvent, catalyst precursox, and, optionally, a promoter, as indicated below. The reactor was sealed and charged with carbon monoxide to a pressure of S00 pounds per square inch gauge (psig), 36.19 kg/cm2. In some cases the gaseous contents of the reactor are vented to remove oxygen. In these cases the reactor is then repressuriæed to about 500 psig. (This venting procedure may be repeated if desired.) Heat was then applied to the reactor and its contents, (initially at about 55C. or as otherwise indicated); when the temperature of the mixture inside the reactor reached the designated reaction temperature, a~ mea~ured hy a suitable placed thermocouple, addition of caxbon monoxide and hydrogen (H~:C0 equals the designated mole ratio) was made to bring the pres~ure to the ~peci~ied reaction pressure. ~he temperature was maintained at the de~ired value ~or the reported time period. ~uring this period of time, additional carbon monoxide and hydrogen were added whenever the pressure .~
13,142 inside the reactor dropped by more than about 500 psig.
(36.19 kg/cm ) over the entire reaction periodO
Ater the reaction period, the reaction vessel was cooled to room temperature, the reaction vessel vented and the reaction products removed. Analysis of the reaction mixture was made by gas chromatograp~lic methods.
The variou~ rates set forth in the ~ollowing examples are averaye rates for the particular product and are determined by measuring the net production of product for the reaction period and assuming a nominal reaction volume of 75 ml.
In the following e~amples, the following procedure was employed:
The infrared spectra of the reaction mixtures were analyzed by withdrawing a sample from a sample bottle blanketed with a nitrogen atmosphere. The sample is placed in an infrared cell having CaF2 windows separated by a 0.1 mm spacer. I necessary, the sample was diluted with the solvent employed in carrying out the reaction. The infrared spectra were recording using a Perkin-Elmer 281B (TM) inrared spectrophotometer with an inrared cell containing reactor solvent being placed in the resrence beam.
FIGS. 1-3 show, re~pectively, the inrared spectra o PPN[Ru¦CO)3I3] in CH2C12;
PPNcHRu3(cO)ll~ in CH2C12; and of a mixture of PPN[HRu3(Co)ll~ and PPN~Ru(CO)3I3] at a 2:1 molar ratio, in ~ulolane. FI~. 4 and FIG. 5 show, '`;~`' ~ ~793~5 l3,l42 respectively, the infrared spectra of reaction mixtures (after catalysis) from Examples 1 and 4.
EX~MP~ES 1-12 The following examples were carried out to demonstrate the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst employed in the process of the invention as indicated by the presence of a synergistic mixture of Ru(CO)3T3 and HRu(CO)ll. In each example, as set forth in Table I, the indicated ruthenium carbonyl complex was employed according to the above described experimental procedure. The process conditions, number o millimoles of ruthenium carbonyl employed, rate of formation of ethylene glycol, rate of formation of methanol and milligram atoms of ruthenium ar~ set forth in Table I.
The following examples were carried out to determine the ratio o Ru(CO33I3 to HRu3(CO)ll to be employed in the process.
Examples 14 to 19, inclusive, were carried out by employing 1.72 milIimoles of PPN[HRu3(CO~ while varying the amount of PPN~RutCO)3I3~ as shown for examples 14 to 19 in Table II. Example~ 20 to 25, inclusive, were carried by employing 0.86 millimoles of PP~u(CO)3I3 while varying the amount of PPN~HRu3(CO)~ as shown in Table II.
The results of examples 13 to 25 are graphically displayed in Figures 7 and 8.
-- ~0 --~'` '' 3 ,142 ~ ~ 7 TABLE Ia Example Complexmmoles Ru, mg-atom EG Rate MeOH Rate 1 Ru3(co)l2 2.0 6.0 .38 2.28 2 PPN[HRu3(CO~11] 2.0 6.0 .10 1.64 3 PPN[HRu3(C0)3I3~6.0 6.0 0 4 PPN[HRu3(CO)11]1.72 6.0 .41 2.92 PPN[Ru(CQ)3I3] 0.86 PpN[HRu3(co)ll 1.72 6.9 .47 2.90 PPNtRu(CO)3I3] 1.72 6 PPNLHRu3(CO)11] 3-44 11.2 .48 2.92 PPN[Ru(CO)3I3] 0.86 7 PPN[HRu3(CO)11]1.72 6.0 .17b l.lob PPN[Ru(CO)3I3] 0.86 8 (PpN)2[Ru6c(co)l6] 1.0 6.0 oll 1~19 g (PpN)2~Ru6c(co)l6] 0.86 6.0 o 0.16 PPN~Ru(CO)3I3] 0.86 (PPN)2[RU6c(cc)l6] 1.0 12.0 .45 2.55 RU3(co)l2 2.0 11 RU3(cQ)l2 1.0 3.0 .35 1.58 12 RU3(C0)12 1.0 3.0 .35C l.glc -Conditions: 75 mL sulfolane solvent, 12500 psi 1:1 H2tCO, 230C, 18 mmoles NaI. Rates are M hr~l. (PPN = bis[bis[triphenylphosphine] iminium).
; b No NaI promoter.
c PPNI (18 mmoles) instead of NaI.
:
;~ , ~.
3 ,142 ~ ~ 7 9 ~ ~ 5 TABLE IIa PPN[Ru(CO)3I3] PPN[HRu3(CO)ll] Total Ru EC Rate MeOH Rate Example (~noles) (~moles) ~g-atoms M hr~l M hr~
13 - - 6.00 .55 4.62 14 .21 1.72 5.37 .18 2.60 .42 1.72 5.59 .24 2.95 16 .86 1.72 6.00 .53 4.67 17 1.72 1.72 6.88 .54 5.55 18 3.44 1.72 8.60 .19 2.84 19 6.88 1.72 12.04 .02 0.08 .86 .21 1.49 .01 0.10 21 .86 .43 2.15 .02 0.11 22 .86 .86 3.44 .11 1.66 23 .86 1.72 6.00 .53 4.67 24 .86 3.~4 11.18 .48 4.21 .86 6.88 21.50 .41 5.43 -a Conditions: 75 mL sulfolane solvent, 12500 psi 1:1 H2/CO, 230, 36 mmoles NaI. (PPN = bis~triphenylphosphine]iminium).
b Charged as Ru3(CO)12; standard run.
" -, . . _. . . ~, . .
~ ~793~
13,142 -A catalytic reaction was begun as described above, employing 1 mmole of Ru3(C0)12, 18 mmoles of KI, and 75 ml of sulfolane solvent under a total pressure of 8000 psi of synthe~is gas (1:1 H2:C0), at 230C. The infrared spectrum of the catalytic solution was recorded during catalysis by use of the high-pressure infrared cell and ~pectrophotometer described elsewhere (J.L. Vidal and W.E. Walker, Inorg. Chem., 19, pages 896-903 (1980)). The infrared spectra of the catalytic solution i~ depicted in Figure 6.
Claims (34)
1. The process for making the products methanol, ethylene glycol and ethanol directly from the reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide which comprises reacting in a liquid phase a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the presence of a ruthenium carbonyl complex catalyst at a temperature between about 50°C.
and 400°C. and a pressure between about 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm2) and 15,000 psia (1,054.6 kg/cm2) wherein the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst is characterized by a synergistic combination of Ru(CO)3I3 and HRu3(Co)11 such being characterized by an infrared spectrum having three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus 10cm-1 of about 2100cm-1, 2015cm-1, and l990cm-1.
and 400°C. and a pressure between about 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm2) and 15,000 psia (1,054.6 kg/cm2) wherein the ruthenium carbonyl catalyst is characterized by a synergistic combination of Ru(CO)3I3 and HRu3(Co)11 such being characterized by an infrared spectrum having three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus 10cm-1 of about 2100cm-1, 2015cm-1, and l990cm-1.
2. The process of claim 1 wherein a promoter of the reaction is provided in the liquid phase.
3. The process of claim 2 wherein the solvent is polar.
4. The process of claim 2 wherein the solvent complexes ions.
5. The process of claim 1 wherein the solvent is a carboxylic acid and the products formed are corresponding derivative carboxylates.
6. The process of claim 1 wherein the temperature is between about 100°C. and about 350°C.
13,142
13,142
7. The process of claim 1 wherein the pressure is between about 500 psia (35.15 kg/cm2) and 12,500 psia (878.84 kg/cm2).
8. The process of claim 1 wherein the pressure is the total pressure of hydrogen and carbon monoxide supplied to said process.
9. The process of claim 3 wherein the solvent is a sulfone.
10. The process of claim 3 wherein the solvent is a lactam.
11. The process of claim 3 wherein the solvent is an ether.
12. The process of claim 11 wherein the solvent is a crown ether.
13. The process of claim 11 wherein the solvent is an alkyl ether of an alkylene glycol.
14. The process of claim 11 wherein the solvent is a dialkyl ether of a polyalkylene glycol.
15. The process of claim 14 wherein the solvent is tetraglyme.
16. The process of claim 3 wherein the solvent is a lactone.
17. The process of claim 16 wherein the solvent is butyrolactone.
13,142
13,142
18. The process of claim 2 wherein an iodide promoter compound is provided in the liquid phase.
19. The process of claim 18 wherein the promoter is an alkali metal iodide.
20. The process of claim 19 wherein the alkali metal iodide is sodium iodide.
21. The process of claim 19 wherein the alkali metal iodide is lithium iodide.
22. The process of claim 19 wherein the alkali metal iodide is potassium iodide.
23. The process of claim 19 wherein the alkali metal iodide is cesium iodide.
24. The process of claim 1 wherein the carbon monoxide and hydrogen are continuously supplied to the liquid phase and product is removed continuously from said liquid phase in combination with unreacted carbon monoxide and hydrogen.
25. The process of claim 24 wherein unreacted carbon monoxide and hydrogen are recycled to the liquid phase .
26. The process of claim 25 wherein a promoter of the reaction is provided in the liquid phase.
27. The process of claim 2 wherein the amount of promoter provided to the reaction is that amount which achieves a measurable promotional effect.
13,142
13,142
28. The process of claim 18 wherein the amount of iodide promoter provided in the liquid phase ranges from about 0.1 mole to about 106 moles for each gram atom of ruthenium present.
29. The process of claim 1 wherein the molar ratio is between about 0.2 and about 1.
30. The process of claim 1 wherein the average oxidation state of ruthenium is between about -0.2 and 0.25.
31. The ruthenium carbonyl complex catalyst for making the products methanol, ethylene glycol and ethanol directly from a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide comprising a synergistic combination of the ruthenium carbonyl complexes Ru(CO)3I3 and HRu3(CO)11 as indicated by an infrared spectrum having three significant infrared bands between about plus or minus 10cm-1 of about 2100 cm-1, 2015 cm-1, and 1990 cm-1.
32. The ruthenium carbonyl complex catalyst of claim 31 wherein the molar ratio of Ru(C0)3I3 to HRu3(C0)11 is between about 0.01 and about 2.
33. The ruthenium complex catalyst of claim 32 wherein the molar ratio is between about 0.2 and about 1.
34. The ruthenium carbonyl complex catalyst of claim 31 wherein the average oxidation state of ruthenium is between about 0.2 and 0.25.
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---|---|---|---|---|
JPS60161933A (en) * | 1984-01-31 | 1985-08-23 | Agency Of Ind Science & Technol | Preparation of oxygen-containing hydrocarbon compound |
TWI465424B (en) * | 2006-03-21 | 2014-12-21 | Bp Chem Int Ltd | Process for the production of acetic acid |
KR20220014299A (en) * | 2020-07-28 | 2022-02-04 | 가부시끼가이샤 도꾸야마 | Method for inhibiting generation of ruthenium-containing gas from ruthenium-containing liquid |
Family Cites Families (7)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
GB2024811B (en) * | 1978-07-03 | 1982-10-13 | Texaco Development Corp | Manufacture of vicinal glycol esters from systhesis gas |
JPS593450B2 (en) * | 1978-12-21 | 1984-01-24 | ユニオン・カ−バイド・コ−ポレ−シヨン | Alcohol manufacturing method |
CA1156209A (en) * | 1978-12-21 | 1983-11-01 | Bernard D. Dombek | Process for producing alcohols |
US4270015A (en) * | 1979-02-05 | 1981-05-26 | Texaco Inc. | Manufacture of ethylene from synthesis gas (D#75,673-C1) |
US4233466A (en) * | 1979-11-15 | 1980-11-11 | Union Carbide Corporation | Homologation process for the production of ethanol from methanol |
US4265828A (en) * | 1979-12-31 | 1981-05-05 | Texaco Development Corp. | Manufacture of ethylene glycol from synthesis gas |
US4301253A (en) * | 1980-09-25 | 1981-11-17 | Union Carbide Corporation | Process for the selective production of ethanol and methanol directly from synthesis gas |
-
1982
- 1982-06-18 CA CA000405494A patent/CA1179315A/en not_active Expired
- 1982-06-28 AU AU85383/82A patent/AU8538382A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1982-06-29 JP JP57110923A patent/JPS588024A/en active Pending
- 1982-06-29 DE DE8282105783T patent/DE3261613D1/en not_active Expired
- 1982-06-29 EP EP82105783A patent/EP0068498B1/en not_active Expired
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
DE3261613D1 (en) | 1985-01-31 |
AU8538382A (en) | 1983-01-06 |
JPS588024A (en) | 1983-01-18 |
EP0068498B1 (en) | 1984-12-19 |
EP0068498A1 (en) | 1983-01-05 |
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